Tuesday, 09 February 2010

Contract awarded to rebuild our hospital Add your comments

A MAJOR boost to the local workforce was given today as the contract to redevelop the West Cumberland Hospital was awarded.

Speaking exclusively to The Whitehaven News, health bosses announced that they have chosen construction giant Laing O’Rourke.
And the company has given an undertaking that the majority of the workforce needed for the £100million redevelopment will be sourced locally through its approved contractors and supply chain.
The North Cumbria University Hospitals Trust said it would generate a significant boost to the local economy and contribute to the regeneration of West Cumbria.
Trust chief executive Carole Heatly said: “In selecting Laing O’Rourke, we have an understanding that they will use the local workforce as much as possible – this is good news especially in times of economic recession and should do much to strengthen the local economy of West Cumbria.”
It is expected that early preparatory work on the site will start before Christmas this year to allow for the major construction to begin in 2010.
The hospital will include a new-build emergency care centre, new theatres, new outpatient area and new wards.
Laing O’Rourke is the largest privately-owned construction firm in the UK. It owes its own foundations to Cumbria where it was started by John Laing, in Cockermouth, in 1848. It was acquired by O’Rourke in 2001.
It is said to be the premier health contractor nationwide with projects including the recent redevelopment of the Freeman and Royal Victoria Hospitals, in Newcastle.
A system called ‘Procure 21’ is now the advised route for all NHS new capital building projects.
It means the redevelopment of West Cumberland Hospital will be a publicly-funded capital project and will not be through the Private Finance Initiative, as the Cumberland Infirmary was.
Health chiefs say they are committed to three ‘givens’ – providing all the services as agreed following the Closer to Home consultation; providing a facility to ‘modernise, improve and deliver care to all patients in West Cumbria’ and to move the development forward quickly.
Mike Little, Trust chairman, said: “This major project will provide a new healthcare facility that will see great improvements for all our patients in West Cumbria along with providing a great boost to the local economy.”
Ms Heatly added: “This is an immensely exciting time for healthcare in West Cumbria. £100 million is a significant investment and the first significant investment into healthcare for West Cumbria in over half-a-century. Working closely with our clinical staff and stakeholders, we will develop a healthcare facility that will offer the best to our patients.”
The Trust’s project team will now be holding wider discussions with clinical teams in the hospital and others to start to produce the detailed designs for the new-look hospital.
The redevelopment will use all current state-of-the-art technologies to ensure that it delivers a low to zero carbon impact on the environment.

Have your say

They can spend the money tarting up a hospital whose facilities are long past their sell by date and on endless managers and external consultants to project manage a scheme which no doubt will never come to fuition, but yet they want to do away with providing a Pathology and Post Morten service at the hospital! Do these people live in the real world?

Posted by Louise Williams on 23 July 2009 at 17:12

I thought the NHS was reducing it's funding for capital projects such as this. Has the project got the support of the local PCT? I thought the NHS' priority was community hospitals across North Cumbria and beyond , not rebuidling this old place.

Posted by Brian Jevons on 23 July 2009 at 12:19

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