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View of Eastside from the McLaren Building in 2011. Eastside is a district of Birmingham City Centre, England that is undergoing a major redevelopment project.The overall cost when completed is expected to be £6–8 billion over ten years which will result in the creation of 12,000 jobs. 8,000 jobs are expected to be created during the construction period.
After joining the National Health Service as Little Bromwich Hospital in 1948, it became a general hospital in 1953. [3] It was renamed East Birmingham Hospital in 1963 and saw considerable expansion in the 1970s. [2] The world's last smallpox patient, Janet Parker, was treated at the hospital during the smallpox outbreak in 1978. [4]
Eastside is the planned location for the city centre terminus station for High Speed 2 (HS2) phase one at Curzon Street railway station. It is expected that once HS2 is complete journey times from London into Birmingham City Centre will be reduced to 45 minutes with the potential to bring £1.4 billion of economic value into the region.
AOL
The tallest building in the Birmingham Metropolitan Area is Octagon, a 49-storey, 155-metre (509 ft) residential tower which forms part of the Paradise development in Birmingham city centre. Octagon surpassed Birmingham's tallest structure , the 140-metre (458 ft) BT Tower , and previous tallest residential building, the 132-metre (433 ft ...
Masshouse is a development site in the Eastside area of Birmingham, England. Its name derives from a Roman Catholic Church built in 1687. Its name derives from a Roman Catholic Church built in 1687. Buildings were cleared to make way for the inner city ring road and car parking in the 1960s.
Princeton Baptist Medical Center in Birmingham, Ala., on Oct. 7th, 2023. (Charity Rachelle for NBC News)
In October 2021, Professor David Rosser, chief executive at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, at the Digital Health's Autumn Leadership Summit reported that the trusts' digital programmes, which included Babylon's Ask A&E chat service had cut the number of preventable hospital visits by 63%. [20]