Cone Health opens urgent, primary and maternal care hub in east Greensboro
Cone Health opened urgent, primary and maternal clinics at The Resurgent, 1806 E. Market St., bringing local health services to an east Greensboro neighborhood with documented care gaps.

Cone Health opened a cluster of clinics at The Resurgent, 1806 E. Market St., bringing urgent care, primary care and a maternal health center into east Greensboro on January 22, 2026. The move places services in a neighborhood the health system and county analysis identified as having shorter life expectancy, barriers to care and lower incomes compared with other ZIP codes.
The new facilities occupy multiple floors of The Resurgent mixed-use development. Cone Health Urgent Care at The Resurgent is on the ground floor, Cone Health Primary Care at The Resurgent is on the second floor, and the Cone Health Center for Women’s Healthcare Services will provide combined mom and baby care with an emphasis on maternal and postpartum services alongside primary care access. The urgent care will operate with limited hours at first as services ramp up.

Cone Health partnered with NC A&T on the $32 million Resurgent project. The health system estimates about 25,000 visits annually to the new clinics, a volume that reflects both anticipated community demand and the partners’ goal of improving local access to routine and perinatal care.
County health equity work helped steer the decision to this location. East Greensboro was singled out in that analysis for markedly shorter average life expectancy and systemic barriers to care, factors that health leaders cite when describing the neighborhood as a medical-desert. Placing a hub of services on E. Market St. aims to reduce travel time for primary care and maternal support, connect more patients to ongoing care relationships, and address preventable gaps that contribute to worse health outcomes.
For expecting parents and postpartum families, the Cone Health Center for Women’s Healthcare Services brings a focused option for continuity of care close to home. For residents without a regular provider or those facing transportation and scheduling constraints, the urgent and primary care clinics add same-site options intended to increase timely access and lower reliance on hospital emergency departments for nonurgent needs.
The Resurgent project also signals investment in east Greensboro’s Commercial or Market Street corridor and in cross-sector partnerships between health systems and academic institutions. Cone Health and NC A&T’s joint approach combines clinical capacity with local development to create a visible care hub in a part of the county that has long lacked nearby services.
Residents should note the urgent care’s limited initial hours and look for posted schedules as the clinics establish regular operating times. Longer term, the centers are positioned to expand access to preventive and maternal care in a neighborhood that stands to benefit from sustained clinical presence.
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