History
Originally known as Lowrance Hospital, Lake Norman Regional Medical Center built a foundation for community care in 1926. S.A. Lowrance donated land, and citizens of Mooresville purchased stock in it for $25 a share. The organization soon became a non-profit corporation, opened a new four-story hospital in 1930 and expanded twice more in the 1950s and 1970s.
In the 1980s, the name was changed to better reflect the hospital's commitment to the greater Lake Norman region. A few years later, in 1999, a new, replacement hospital and medical campus was built on more than 30 acres just off I-77 at Exit 33. With more than 300 physicians representing a broad range of medical specialties, the hospital continues to add technology and specialty service lines while remaining focused on the delivery of quality, compassionate medical care.