Building to be used as CRH Heroes House for employees to isolate

An old post office in downtown Columbus being renovated as a recovery center for mothers battling addiction will temporarily become a place of honor for health care workers involved in treating patients with COVID-19.

Until the COVID-19 crisis is over, the limestone building at the northeast corner of Seventh and Washington will become the CRH Heroes House, said Columbus Regional Health spokeswoman Kelsey DeClue.

“This is reserved for our workforce and providers who have been exposed (to the novel coronavirus) from a positive patient or positive employee,” DeClue said.

Originally, the Fresh Start Recovery Center was scheduled to hold an open house this month at that location. But the treatment center for women in recovery who could live there with their children won’t be allowed to open until the contagion risk drops significantly or is eliminated.

That prompted Volunteers of America, which acquired the building in August 2018, to temporarily offer it to hospital workers exposed to the virus, said Mary Ferdon, Columbus executive director of administration and community development.

The remodeled building has 17 bedrooms, an equal number of bathrooms, common space, kitchen and laundry facilities, Ferdon said. With three floors, the building works perfectly for these professionals to eat, sleep and isolate, Ferdon said.

For more on this story, see Thursday’s Republic.