The Scotsman

Iconic Sick Kids faces flat future

- By KEVAN CHRISTIE Health Correspond­ent kevan.christie@jpress.co.uk

Property developers have agreed a multi-million pound deal with a health board to buy a children’s hospital in Edinburgh.

The city’s Royal Hospital for Sick Children has been sold by NHS Lothian to the Liverpool-based Downing Group.

Patients and staff are due to move to a new £150 million facility next year.

The value of the deal struck for the site is believed to be in the region of £20m.

Property developers have struck a multi-million pound deal with health board bosses to buy a children’s hospital.

The Royal Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh, which will move to a new £150 million site next year, has been sold by NHS Lothian to Liverpool-based property developers the Downing Group.

Six bidders were invited to provide further informatio­n before the health board and Edinburgh and the Lothians Health Foundation chose the winner of the deal believed to be in the region of £20m for the 1.62 hectares site in the Marchmont, Meadows and Bruntsfiel­d conservati­on area.

However, the decision was met with fury by the community group – Marchmont and Sciennes Developmen­t Trust (MSDT) who said they were “gutted” that their applicatio­n had been thrown out.

Residents living next to the site had wanted to purchase it under new urban “community right to buy” laws and had asked Scottish ministers to use this regulation to give them first refusal to buy the site.

A MSDT spokespers­on, said: “We are gutted that we have not even had the chance for our applicatio­n to be judged by the Scottish Government, which appears to be in the dark about this sale.

“This applicatio­n was considered as an ‘acid test’ for the new urban right to buy laws and we feel very disappoint­ed, as will many people in the community around the Sick Kids, that we did not get the chance to show how it would work.

“The reality of this decision is that only the bare legal minimum of the sorts of things local people suggested for this site – such as the affordable housing, more space for the local school and community facilities – is likely to happen now.”

The proposed move to the new location at Little France has been hit by delays despite being originally scheduled to open this autumn.

That was put back to February next year and the project is now expected to be completed no earlier than May 2018.

Jacquie Campbell, Chief Officer for Acute Services, NHS Lothian said: “The decision to move the services from the current site and dispose of the site was not an easy one to make.

“The legacy of the Royal Hospital for Sick Kids dates back to 1863 and since 1895 the hospital at Sciennes Road has been home to thousands of children and their families in the building many have grown to call ‘the sick kids’.”

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