Marking the end of an era for Brighton hospital
Nicki Colburn, the junior sister on the Oncology Ward, exchanged her uniform for protective gear to take the first swing at her department’s old building.
Accompanied by representatives from contractors Laing O’Rourke and H.Smith, Nicki climbed to the top of the scaffold surrounding the Jubilee Building. Wielding a two-kilo hammer she marked both the building and the official start of the ‘hard deconstruction’ process - the removal of the building’s structure.
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Hide AdAfter witnessing how much effort was involved in removing even a small piece of the building by hand, Nicki said: “It now makes perfect sense to me why the building has to be taken down using a machine. In one way I am sorry to see it go because there are so many stories linked to it, but the age of the building made caring for patients harder. If we want new buildings, and I think everyone does, it makes sense to replace the really old ones.”
The oncology and infectious diseases wards moved out of the Jubilee Building in November of last year as part of the 3Ts Redevelopment’s Decant Programme.
Patients and staff relocated from the 130-year-old facility to the new Courtyard Building, which offers three times as much space per patient, plenty of storage, and 18 of the 22 beds are in single en-suite rooms. The wards will stay in the modular Courtyard Building until their accommodation is ready in the redevelopment’s new permanent buildings.
The Jubilee Building will be taken down using a long arm excavator which will remove one level of the building at a time, in small sections. The building’s materials will be removed from the hospital in covered containers.
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Hide AdThe Jubilee Building is the largest structure to be taken down in preparation for the redevelopment’s Stage 1 Building. It took its first patients in 1887 and was named in honour of Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee. The deconstruction will be completed in April of this year.