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The hospital had its origins in St Alfege's Hospital in Greenwich which by the 1960s was in need of replacement. [1] In order to build a hospital with a large enough capacity for the requirements of the local population (up to 800 beds) on a small site (less than 8 acres), a single large building was designed - Pevsner described it as "an unusually large enterprise to be undertaken by the ...
In 1965 the hospital was absorbed by Greenwich District Hospital (formerly St Alfege's), [9] becoming the Miller General Wing. However, in need of expensive modernisation, it was closed in 1974. [1] Services were transferred to the District Hospital, and most of the Miller buildings were demolished in 1975.
St Alfege's Hospital was a hospital that operated in the Maze Hill area of east Greenwich in southeast London. It operated as the Greenwich Union Infirmary from 1874 to 1929. It was briefly known as the Greenwich and Deptford Hospital before becoming St Alfege's Hospital in 1931. It was then superseded by Greenwich District Hospital in 1968. [1]
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The hospital closure will “effectively double the numbers of bodies” coming in. The hospital also serviced the county’s jail system, and the sheriff’s office said it will be requesting the ...
Greenwich Hospital may refer to: Greenwich Hospital, London, which was a home for retired Royal Navy sailors 1692–1869, operated by the Greenwich Hospital charitable foundation; Greenwich District Hospital, a hospital in London from 1970 to 2001; Trinity Hospital, a group of almshouses located east of Maritime Greenwich
On January 22 the Hospital Sisters Health System announced the permanent closures of not only its two HSHS hospitals, HSHS Sacred Heart in Eau Claire and HSHS St. Joseph in Chippewa Falls, but ...
At the time of its closure, St. Vincent's occupied a large real-estate footprint in Greenwich Village; it consisted of several hospital buildings and a number of outpatient facilities, had more than 1,000 affiliated physicians, including 70 full-time and 300 voluntary attending physicians, and trained more than 300 residents and fellows annually.