Julie Anderson Omaha World-Herald The Munroe-Meyer Instituteâs new $91 million home features cold- and warm-water pools, an indoor splash pad and state-of-the art physical therapy and virtual reality labs intended to provide the care needed by people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. But Dr. Karoly Mirnics, the instituteâs director, said what he hopes to see in the faces of patients when they walk into the facility, which was dedicated Tuesday, is a sense of belonging. âThat they are part of this enterprise, that this enterprise was built for them and that it represents a promise that we will do our best to help them reach their potential,â Mirnics said. âAnd we are not there only for one day. We are there for a lifetime.â