Sponsors

Brighton’s new trauma centre offers ‘once-in-a-generation’ improvement for staff

A new, ‘state-of-the-art’ building at the Royal Sussex County Hospital in Brighton has welcomed patients for the first time.

The opening of the new Louisa Martindale Building, designed by a multidisciplinary team from BDP and built by Laing O’ Rourke, marks the completion of Stage one of the 14-year ‘3Ts’ project to bring teaching, trauma, and tertiary care facilities to the region.  

Now, as the region’s main trauma centre, it is expected that over 100,000 patients a year will be treated across 13 floors in the purpose-designed environments that BDP says ‘present the very latest standards in healthcare buildings’. The practice says the additional clinical and support accommodation facilities provide ‘a once-in-a-generation improvement’ for staff and patients requiring hospital care from across Sussex.

The building also provides major new facilities for multiple wards and departments, new diagnostic and theatre capacity, and increased capacity for units with high demand, including neurosciences, stroke services, and intensive care. The Imaging Department is also housed in the building, and is already benefiting from new scanning equipment.

BDP says its design ‘fits a large-scale hospital building sensitively into its historic context in a constrained site in Brighton’. It said: “The topography of the site is fully exploited, with the mass of the building broken down into fingers containing the bulk of the ward accommodation. All the patient rooms face south, with views over the English Channel, increasing a connection with the outdoors and the calming scenes of the sea.”

BDP’s Architect director, Enzo Guddemi, said: “The Louisa Martindale Building is designed to deliver a reassuring, calming atmosphere for patients and staff to support and enhance the amazing care provided by the Trust.  It is an outstanding building. The light, open, and airy feel and views across the Channel bring a new dimension to those who may be experiencing some of life’s most stressful moments. It is all designed to be legible and navigable, and we know this is an exciting point in time for everyone connected to this project. We are sure it will only support the Trust’s ongoing ambition to deliver new buildings which showcase the future of NHS facilities, today.”

Gavin Body, Laing O’Rourke Project leader, said: “We have handed over an outstanding hospital to the NHS, and I know it will transform the way doctors and nurses can care for their patients. The project has been one with complex challenges, including delivering the new facilities while allowing the existing hospital to keep services running throughout. I am tremendously proud of our team. They maintained focus, throughout the pandemic and beyond, to deliver a hospital that will serve the people of Sussex for generations to come.”

Throughout the project, BDP was involved in detailed negotiations with the local planning authority and Historic England to ensure the best design for a town centre hospital. The town planning team led extensive negotiations with the local authority on the complex Section 106 Agreement and planning conditions, and continues to consult on behalf of University Hospitals Sussex NHS Foundation Trust for stages two and three of the project. Stage two is now underway – to create a new Sussex Cancer Centre and Emergency Department, replacing the oldest acute ward building in the NHS, the Barry Building, which opened in 1828.

BDP delivered architecture, environmental engineering, interior design, landscape architecture, and town planning.

 

 

Latest Issues