Sinai Hospital Opens Mandy & Dennis Weinman Cancer Building in Baltimore

Sinai Hospital of Baltimore has opened the Mandy & Dennis Weinman Cancer Building, a three-story, 125,000 SF outpatient center combining adult and pediatric oncology, radiation therapy, and research space. The $95 million facility, part of LifeBridge Health, began seeing patients on July 10, 2026.

Sinai Hospital of Baltimore has opened a new outpatient cancer center on its campus, consolidating adult and pediatric oncology services that had previously been spread across multiple locations. The Mandy & Dennis Weinman Cancer Building spans three stories and roughly 125,000 SF, housing infusion treatment, radiation therapy, physician offices and a research laboratory under one roof.

Construction began in 2023 and wrapped up at the end of 2025, with additional interior work on the radiation oncology space continuing into 2026. Sinai Hospital, part of the LifeBridge Health system, held a dedication ceremony on June 30, 2026, and patients began receiving care in the building on July 10.

Thirty-two infusion bays, split between private and semi-private pods, occupy the adult oncology floor, along with 16 exam rooms and a procedure room for minor outpatient interventions. A separate section of the building serves pediatric hematology and oncology patients, featuring seven infusion bays, seven exam rooms and support spaces including an art therapy room and a themed activity area for children undergoing treatment.

Radiation oncology services occupy the ground floor and include access to intensity-modulated radiation therapy, stereotactic radiosurgery, stereotactic body radiation therapy and brachytherapy. The department holds accreditation from the American College of Radiology, and the broader cancer program carries accreditation through the American College of Surgeons Commission on Cancer.

Funding for the estimated $95 million project has come from a mix of private philanthropy and public sources, including federal and state contributions. Hospital officials reported that more than 60 percent of a $20 million fundraising goal had been secured toward the building and its associated services. Amy Shlossman, president of Sinai Hospital and Grace Medical Center, and Dr. Pallavi P. Kumar, cancer center director for LifeBridge Health’s oncology service line, were both involved in planning tied to the project.

Adjacent to Cylburn Arboretum, the building incorporates design elements intended to support patient comfort, including natural lighting, an art collection donated by philanthropist Wendy Jachman, and a family living space with a fireplace. According to information released by LifeBridge Health, the Alvin & Lois Lapidus Cancer Institute serves more than 30,000 patients annually across its network.