The Chronicle

GENERAL KNOWLEDGE

Former hospital site could be turned into world-leading science research centre

- By GRAEME WHITFIELD Business Editor graeme.whitfield@reachplc.com

NEWCASTLE University has bought the city’s General Hospital site with a view to turning in into a worldleadi­ng centre for scientific research.

The university has paid almost £7.5m to buy the site from Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and unveiled plans to develop the Campus for Ageing and Vitality, which occupies part of the site.

The future of the hospital site has been in question for more than a decade, with the hospitals trust having moved most of its services off the site and plans for a Tesco on the land failing to come to fruition.

The university is planning to develop three zones on the 29-acre site between Nuns Moor Road and Westgate Road, with hopes that businesses could also be attracted to set up bases for themselves close to the cutting-edge medical research taking place.

The university’s plans follow a similar scheme in its work with Newcastle City Council to turn the Helix site on the edge of the city centre into a mixture of academic research, businesses supporting highly skilled and highly paying jobs, and housing.

University vicechance­llor Prof Chris

Day said: “Our unique position with expertise in ageing, nutrition, digital science and tech, combined with the forwardthi­nking nature of our city partners, particular­ly around the challenges of supporting an ageing population, could help transform this site.

“This is an exciting and ambitious vision which looks to the next 10 to 15 years to ensure that we are a world-leading hotbed of innovation and creative research in the field of ageing.” The university is working in collaborat­ion with Newcastle Hospitals and Newcastle City Council on the plans, with proposals for a ‘Discovery Crucible’ which would house laboratori­es alongside cutting edge clinics. This would allow NHS patients to be seen by experts across all discipline­s and as part of university research projects, providing teams with the opportunit­y to learn from expertise outside their field and develop new and innovative solutions. The central zone would encompass a dementia care village of a type that has been developed in the Netherland­s, a care home, an intermedia­te care facility and assisted living such as prototype homes for older people using innovative technology to enable them to live independen­tly.

Plans also outline a residentia­l zone with potential for new businesses and commercial partners as well as opportunit­ies for creative arts.

Dame Jackie Daniel, chief executive of Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, said: “This is an iconic site which has been at the heart of Newcastle’s healthcare for decades.

“This ensures that local people will be among the first to benefit from world class health research, developmen­ts and innovation­s within the NHS and on their doorstep. It further strengthen­s Newcastle’s internatio­nal status as a leader in healthcare for older people, which is great news for the city.”

City council chief executive Pat Ritchie said: “The city council and Newcastle University have a strong track record of collaborat­ing in the interests of the city. For example, with the developmen­t of the Helix site at the forefront of commercial­ising pioneering scientific research and attracting significan­t privatesec­tor investment and jobs.

“The proposed developmen­t on the former General Hospital site is a further progressio­n of that close relationsh­ip in partnershi­p with the hospitals trust which demonstrat­es our shared commitment to be at the forefront of innovation, creating safe environmen­ts with an integrated multi-agency approach to health and well-being to meet the needs of an ageing population.”

The existing Westgate Walk-in

This is an exciting vision which looks to ensure we are a world-leading hotbed of research in the field of ageing Prof Chris Day

Centre, a nurse-led unit for patients with minor injuries and illnesses at the south end of the site, will remain and is outside the site purchased for re-developmen­t.

Other services on site, including the Diabetes Centre, will remain in place for up to three years.

There has also been agreement with the Northumber­land, Tyne and Wear NHS Foundation Trust to continue to provide mental health in-patient facilities on the site, though services are likely to move to the St Nicholas Hospital in Gosforth in the longer term.

The proposal to acquire the site has been passed by the university’s council and the board of the hospitals trust.

The General Hospital was originally built as the infirmary of the Newcastle Union Workhouse, opening in 1870.

In 1948, it was renamed Newcastle General Hospital when it became part of the NHS.

It remained the city’s main hospital for most of the second half of the 20th century, but most acute services were moved to the Royal Victoria Infirmary and the Freeman Hospital between 2008 and 2010.

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 ??  ?? A CGI of the approach to Discovery Crucible from Studley Terrace
A CGI of the approach to Discovery Crucible from Studley Terrace
 ??  ?? From left, Dame Jackie Daniel, Prof Chris Day and Pat Ritchie at the redevelopm­ent site
From left, Dame Jackie Daniel, Prof Chris Day and Pat Ritchie at the redevelopm­ent site
 ??  ?? A view of Discovery Crucible from ‘Science Ampitheatr­e’
A view of Discovery Crucible from ‘Science Ampitheatr­e’

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