Baby KJs Clifton Heights Dad Is Helping CHOP Build a Patient Tower

KJ Muldoon gets a “clap-out” with his mother Nicole and father Kyle as he leaves his unit at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Tuesday.

Kyle Muldoon, the father of the Clifton Heights toddler who received a life-saving genetic therapy at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, is helping the hospital build a new patient tower, writes Kayla Yup for The Philadelphia Inquirer.

KJ Muldoon, 17 months, was successfully treated for a genetic condition using a first-ever gene-editing therapy developed at CHOP and the University of Pennsylvania. It earned him international recognition as one of 10 people who changed science in 2025.

His father, Kyle, was a construction worker and had accepted a layoff at a previous job to care for his sick son.

He joined a CHOP project in December 2024 while his son was still hospitalized there, and is helping build a 26-story patient tower called Roberts Children’s Health. It is set to launch in 2028.

Muldoon explained to the person hiring for the $2.6 billion construction project that he would “essentially be living next door.”

Working on the project allowed him to stay close to KJ during his 307-day stay at CHOP.

 The work has felt particularly meaningful to him.

“Every day when I get up, I know what I’m doing this for,” Muldoon said.

Read more about KJ’s disease and treatment, and find out more about the new patient tower in The Philadelphia Inquirer.




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