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Wellington Hospital, New Zealand

Wellington Hospital, also known as Wellington Regional Hospital, is the main hospital in Wellington, New Zealand, located south of the city centre in the suburb of Newtown. It is the main hospital run by Te Whatu Ora, Capital, Coast and Hutt Valley (formerly Capital & Coast District Health Board).

Wellington Hospital
Te Whatu Ora
Wellington Regional Hospital main building in April 2020
Geography
LocationNewtown, Wellington, New Zealand
Organisation
FundingPublic hospital
Services
Emergency departmentYes
HelipadICAO: NZWH
History
Opened1847
Links
WebsiteOfficial website
ListsHospitals in New Zealand

The hospital serves Wellington City, Porirua and the Kāpiti Coast District. Lower Hutt and Upper Hutt have a separate hospital, Hutt Hospital, in the Lower Hutt suburb of Boulcott.

Wellington Hospital is the Wellington Region's main tertiary hospital, with services such as complex specialist and acute (or "tertiary") services, procedures and treatments such as the Intensive Care Unit, cardiac surgery, cancer care, cardiology procedures, neurosurgery, and renal care. The hospital is a tertiary referral centre for the lower half of the North Island and the top of the South Island (specifically the Hawke's Bay, Manawatu-Wanganui, Wellington, Tasman, Nelson and Marlborough regions), and for the Chatham Islands.[1]

It is affiliated with the University of Otago, Wellington and the medical and health sciences campus is situated adjacent to the main hospital buildings in Mein St.[2]

Services edit

Main hospital edit

Wellington Hospital has 484 beds, and provides children's health, maternity, surgical and medical services.[3]

Mental Health Services edit

Wellington Hospital Mental Health Services is a separate mental health facility on the hospital campus with 29 beds.[4]

 
Te Wao Nui, April 2023

Te Wao Nui - child health services edit

Te Wao Nui, child health services, are housed in the Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood Building which opened in 2022.[5][6][7]

Emergency Department edit

The Emergency Department is located on Riddiford St.[8]

History edit

1880s – 1920 edit

The first hospital in Wellington, the Colonial Hospital, was established in Thorndon in 1847 on the site of what is now Wellington Girls' College.[9] Built to address the needs of both Māori and pākehā it was one of the first four hospitals established by Governor George Grey.[10] A new hospital was designed by architect Christian Toxward and construction of the hospital in Newtown began in 1876 using prison labour; it was opened in 1881.[11][12]: 21  Mental health patients were housed in a hospital at Mt View (now Government House) until a new asylum opened at Porirua in 1900.[12]: 36–37 

 
Staff of Wellington Hospital in 1885

Between 1881 and 1912 the hospital expanded its services with six new buildings.[12]: 48  The Victoria Operating Theatres opened in 1901.[13] In 1904 a nurse's home opened and was enlarged in 1907 to accommodate 96 nurses.[14][12]: 42  The Victoria Hospital for chronic conditions opened in 1905.[12]: 38 [15] In 1906 concern over the spread of tuberculosis (TB) and its treatment led to the opening of the Seddon ward chalets.[12]: 42 [16] Recognition of the need for an isolation ward to care for people with infectious diseases resulted in the acquisition of land off Coromandel St in Newtown and the opening of the first Fever Hospital in 1910.[12]: 43 [17] It was named the Ewart Hospital after medical superintendent John Ewart; a new Fever Hospital was built in 1919.[18]

 
Nursery rhyme tile

A children's hospital, the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital, opened in 1912.[9][19] The hospital was decorated with 18 nursery rhyme murals made of Royal Doulton tiles which cost £800 at the time (equivalent to NZD $60,000 in 2021).[9][20][21]

Under the Hospital and Charitable Institutions Act 1909 the Wellington Hospital Board was established in 1913 and the first elections to the board held.[12]: 48 

During World War I hospital facilities were severely strained by several factors: soldiers from the Trentham Military Camp needing treatment for infectious diseases; war casualties; staff shortages as staff enlisted to serve in the war and the 1918 flu epidemic.[12]: 53–54 

1920s – 1940s edit

After World War I the hospital developed and expanded a number of specialist departments and therapies: tuberculosis, psychiatry, cancer, an ante-natal clinic, urogenital and urology departments, a skin diseases clinic, orthopaedic surgery, a venereal disease clinic and cardiology clinic.[12]: 61–67 [22][23] In 1924 the foundation stone was laid for a new administration building on Riddiford St, which opened in 1927.[12]: 61–67 [24] Janet Fraser, wife of the future prime minister Peter Fraser, served on the Board from 1925 to 1935.[25]

The hospital experienced severe financial difficulties in the depression.[12]: 85  It was overcrowded and while new buildings were planned further building programmes did not proceed due to political wrangling during the late 1930s.[12]: 85 [26] During the war the hospital experienced waiting lists, a shortage of staff and an influx of military patients; a soldiers' ward block was opened in 1941.[12]: 90–91  A new building, known as the 210 block, was completed in 1944 which reduced overcrowding.[12]: 96 [27] The hospital celebrated its centenary in 1947.[28][29]

1950s – 1970s edit

From the 1950s to 1970s various plans were proposed for redevelopment of the hospital. One proposed a 1200-bed hospital while another planned an 800-bed hospital. Several factors had to be considered in redevelopment. New specialties needed to be accommodated: neurology, coronary care, renal dialysis, respiratory research, vascular surgery, radiotherapy and nuclear medicine. Care in the community and district nursing expanded.[12]: 112–113  There was the projected population and needs of the Hutt Valley, Porirua and the Kapiti area and the inclusion of a clinical school to train medical students.[30][31] The decision to create a University of Otago clinical school was preceded by lobbying for a third medical school attached to Victoria University.[12]: 113 

In the late 1950s there was such an urgent need for new operating theatres and beds for surgical patients that a new building with these facilities opened. The new theatres enabled expansion of cardiothoracic surgical services.[32] Two nurses' homes also opened in 1949 and 1958.[32] A new block, the 150 bed Seddon block opened in 1966 replacing the old Seddon ward chalets. It was intended that this be a chest hospital to relieve pressure on Ewart hospital but as the numbers of TB patients had significantly declined the new block was used for cardiac, renal, cardiothoracic surgical and other medical patients.[33][34]

Three further buildings opened in the 1970s: the Academic block serving as the clinical school in 1977; the Clinical Services building in 1978; the Grace Neill block, named after nurse Grace Neill, providing obstetric and gynaecology services in 1978.[31]

1980s – 1990s edit

The Ward support and Link blocks opened in 1980.[31] Construction of new buildings required demolition of many of the older hospital buildings including the original 1881 building.[35] The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital was demolished when a new children's hospital opened in 1988.[36] The nursery rhyme tiles were removed from the old building and re-erected by the Wellington Hospital Royal Doulton Mural Preservation Trust Inc. in 1992.[37] The Seddon block was also demolished in 1999.[35]

The 2000s edit

A new emergency department (ED) opened in 2000.[35] In 2023 the government announced plans for a new ED which would create up-to-date facilities in a larger building.[38][39]

 
Frontage of demolished 1927 building in 2009

In May 2002, the Government approved the new regional hospital (NRH) Project, a major redevelopment of the hospital.[40] The project centred on a new main building, including a new state-of-the-art 18-bed Intensive Care Unit, a new operating theatre complex, and uniting the medical and surgical wards into a single building. Construction began in 2004 with demolition and clearing of the site.[41] This included demolishing the 1940s 210 block and the 1927 Front Block, from which the entrance arches and steps were preserved and reinstated at the back of the new building.[41] Construction was completed in 2008 and the new hospital was officially opened by Governor-General Anand Satyanand on 6 March 2009.[41][42] In early 2010 Prince William visited children in the hospital.[43]

In September 2022 a new child health services building, the Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood Building, opened. Local property developers Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood donated $53 million towards construction of the new building.[5][6][7] The building won awards from the New Zealand Institute of Architects and the Property Council in 2023.[44][45]

Both the main hospital building and the child health services building have base isolators to minimise damage during an earthquake.[46][47]

Nurses' Memorial Chapel edit

 
Stained glass window in chapel, 2023

The Nurses' Memorial Chapel was only one of three chapels in New Zealand dedicated to the memory of nurses, the other two being at Christchurch Hospital and Waikato Hospital.[48]: 13 

Planning for a Nurses' Memorial Chapel began in 1933 and extensive fundraising commenced in 1934 using the profit from a nursing reunion.[49] Donations of money were received from individuals, patients, bequests, community appeals and house-to-house collections.[49] By 1961 £28,000 had been raised (equivalent to NZD $670,000 in 2021), enough to allow architects to draw up plans and to accept a tender for construction.[48]: 25  In addition to raising funds to construct the chapel many of the fixtures and fittings, such as pews, kneelers, a lecturn and font, were also donated.[49]

The foundation stone was laid in November 1964 on a site south of the nurses' homes, close to Riddiford St.[48]: 26  The chapel was opened on 30 October 1965 by the Governor General Sir Bernard Fergusson's wife, Lady Laura Fergusson.[48]: 29 

 
St John Ambulance stained glass window in chapel, 2023

A notable feature of the building was the stained-glass windows in the north wall designed by Beverley Shore Bennett and Martin Roestenburg.[48]: 42  In 1965 when the chapel opened the 72 windows were filled with coloured glass but by 2001 this was replaced in 51 windows by stained-glass designs.[48]: 41–42  The subjects of and depictions in the windows were varied: saints and apostles, Saint Fabiola, Florence Nightingale's lamp, the New Zealand Registered Nurses (NZRN) badge, the staff and snake of Asclepius, the original hospital at Pipitea St, the 1981 centennial of the hospital, the centenary of the School of Nursing in 1983, and the St John Ambulance which incorporated Māori kowhaiwhai pattern and the mangopare (hammerhead shark) motif. Many of the windows were dedicated to former staff of the hospital.[48]: 44–58 

The chapel was well-used for services attended by both staff and patients, and as a place for quiet reflection. However the number of religious services declined over the years and in 2000 the chapel became a Nursing Education Centre.[48]: 58–62 

The chapel was demolished in 2004 to make way for redevelopment on the hospital site.[50] The stained-glass windows were removed before demolition and stored until 2010 when most were re-installed by Olaf Wehr-Candler in the chapel in the new hospital building.[51]

Notable staff edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "New Zealand Out-of-Hospital Major Trauma Destination Policy -- Lower North Island Area" (PDF). National Trauma Network/Te Hononga Whētuki ā-Motu. February 2017.
  2. ^ University of Otago, Wellington. "About the University of Otago, Wellington". www.otago.ac.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-24.
  3. ^ "Wellington Hospital - Ministry of Health Profile". health.govt.nz. Ministry of Health.
  4. ^ "Wellington Hospital Mental Health Services - Ministry of Health Profile". health.govt.nz. Ministry of Health.
  5. ^ a b "New children's hospital, Te Wao Nui, opens in Wellington". 1 News. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  6. ^ a b "New $110m children's hospital opens in Wellington thanks to 'fairy godparents'". Newshub. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  7. ^ a b Thomas, Rachel (2022-12-30). "New Year Honours: Mark Dunajtschik a knight just 3 years after becoming a 'Kiwi'". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-04-06.
  8. ^ "After hours and emergency care | CCDHB". www.ccdhb.org.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  9. ^ a b c King Edward VII Memorial Hospital for Children: opened 13th March 1912. Wellington. 1912. OCLC 155838330.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ "The Thorndon Hospitals". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  11. ^ "Newtown Hospitals". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Barber, L.; Towers, R.J. (1976). Wellington hospital 1847-1976. Wellington Hospital Board. OCLC 4179287.
  13. ^ "Initial expansion. Operating Theatre under construction". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  14. ^ "Initial expansion. A New Nurses' Home". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  15. ^ "Initial expansion. Victoria Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  16. ^ "Initial expansion. The Seddon shelters". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  17. ^ "Longer term planning. Fever Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  18. ^ "Longer term planning. Fever (Ewart) Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  19. ^ "Longer term planning. Children's Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  20. ^ "Wellington Children's Hospital". Te Ara. 2018. Retrieved 10 July 2023.
  21. ^ "Longer term planning. Inside the Childrens' [sic] Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  22. ^ "The 1920s. More facilities required". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  23. ^ "The 1920s. The first Cardiology Department". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  24. ^ "The 1920s. The Hospital in 1927". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  25. ^ Stace, Hilary (2006). "Fraser, Janet". Te Ara - the Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
  26. ^ "The 1930s - 1040s. A costly project". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  27. ^ "The 1930s - 1940s. The 210 Block - completed". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  28. ^ "The 1930s - 1940s. 1947 Centenary". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-26.
  29. ^ "Wellington Hospital". Press. 10 September 1947. p. 2. Retrieved 27 July 2023 – via Papers Past.
  30. ^ "The 1950s - 1960s. Plans for redevelopment". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  31. ^ a b c "The 1950s - 1960s. Plans for a new Wellington Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  32. ^ a b "The 1950s - 1960s. The hospital in 1960". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  33. ^ "The 1950s - 1960s. The new Seddon wing". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  34. ^ "The 1950s - 1960s. The new Seddon wing - completed". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  35. ^ a b c "The last 10 years". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  36. ^ "Down with the old. The new Children's Hospital". ndhadeliver.natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  37. ^ Duke, Jan; Bamford, Anita (2003). Wellington Hospital 2003: a photographic essay. Kapiti Print Media. pp. 31–39, 63. ISBN 0476001846.
  38. ^ Knell, Conor (2023-06-09). "Wellington Hospital's emergency department to get new beds, revamped assessment area". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  39. ^ "Government announces significant expansion of Wellington Regional Hospital ED". The Beehive. 10 June 2023. Retrieved 2023-07-30.
  40. ^ "Wellington Regional Hospital plan gets go ahead". The Beehive. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  41. ^ a b c "New regional hospital". Capital and Coast District Health Board. Retrieved 25 September 2020.
  42. ^ "Wellington Regional Hospital opening". gg.govt.nz. Retrieved 2020-09-24.
  43. ^ "Prince William popular at Wellington Hospital". Otago Daily Times Online News. 2010-01-19. Retrieved 2023-07-10.
  44. ^ "2023 Wellington Architecture Awards Winners". NZ Institute of Architects (www.nzia.co.nz). 18 May 2023. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  45. ^ "Innovative Te Wao Nui, Wellington Children's Hospital Receives Top Honours At 2023 Property Industry Awards". www.scoop.co.nz. 24 June 2023. Retrieved 2023-07-23.
  46. ^ "Base Isolation". Wellington City Council. 2014-05-21. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
  47. ^ Macandrew, Ruby (2019-08-19). "State-of-the-art base isolation system for Wellington's new children's hospital". Stuff. Retrieved 2023-08-02.
  48. ^ a b c d e f g h Stevenson, Annette (2001). Wellington Hospital Nurses Memorial Chapel. Palmerston North: Dunmore Press. ISBN 0908719124. OCLC 155711454.
  49. ^ a b c Crossman, Ethel (February 1966). "Nurses' Memorial Chapel". New Zealand Nursing Journal. 59 (2): 22–23.
  50. ^ "Wellington Hospital. Nurses Memorial Chapel". natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 2023-07-25.
  51. ^ "The Hospital Chapel – Wellington Hospital Chaplaincy Trust". 2011-11-28. Retrieved 2023-07-25.
  52. ^ "KATE MARSDEN". The Barrier Miner. Broken Hill, NSW: National Library of Australia. 28 August 1894. p. 2. Retrieved 6 March 2014.

Further reading edit

  • MacDonald Wilson, D. 1948. A Hundred Years of Healing : Wellington Hospital 1847 - 1947 Wellington: AW & AH Reed.

External links edit

41°18′31″S 174°46′46″E / 41.3086°S 174.7794°E / -41.3086; 174.7794

wellington, hospital, zealand, other, uses, wellington, hospital, disambiguation, wellington, hospital, also, known, wellington, regional, hospital, main, hospital, wellington, zealand, located, south, city, centre, suburb, newtown, main, hospital, whatu, capi. For other uses see Wellington Hospital disambiguation Wellington Hospital also known as Wellington Regional Hospital is the main hospital in Wellington New Zealand located south of the city centre in the suburb of Newtown It is the main hospital run by Te Whatu Ora Capital Coast and Hutt Valley formerly Capital amp Coast District Health Board Wellington HospitalTe Whatu OraWellington Regional Hospital main building in April 2020GeographyLocationNewtown Wellington New ZealandOrganisationFundingPublic hospitalServicesEmergency departmentYesHelipadICAO NZWHHistoryOpened1847LinksWebsiteOfficial websiteListsHospitals in New ZealandThe hospital serves Wellington City Porirua and the Kapiti Coast District Lower Hutt and Upper Hutt have a separate hospital Hutt Hospital in the Lower Hutt suburb of Boulcott Wellington Hospital is the Wellington Region s main tertiary hospital with services such as complex specialist and acute or tertiary services procedures and treatments such as the Intensive Care Unit cardiac surgery cancer care cardiology procedures neurosurgery and renal care The hospital is a tertiary referral centre for the lower half of the North Island and the top of the South Island specifically the Hawke s Bay Manawatu Wanganui Wellington Tasman Nelson and Marlborough regions and for the Chatham Islands 1 It is affiliated with the University of Otago Wellington and the medical and health sciences campus is situated adjacent to the main hospital buildings in Mein St 2 Contents 1 Services 1 1 Main hospital 1 2 Mental Health Services 1 3 Te Wao Nui child health services 1 4 Emergency Department 2 History 2 1 1880s 1920 2 2 1920s 1940s 2 3 1950s 1970s 2 4 1980s 1990s 2 5 The 2000s 2 6 Nurses Memorial Chapel 3 Notable staff 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksServices editMain hospital edit Wellington Hospital has 484 beds and provides children s health maternity surgical and medical services 3 Mental Health Services edit Wellington Hospital Mental Health Services is a separate mental health facility on the hospital campus with 29 beds 4 nbsp Te Wao Nui April 2023 Te Wao Nui child health services edit Te Wao Nui child health services are housed in the Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood Building which opened in 2022 5 6 7 Emergency Department edit The Emergency Department is located on Riddiford St 8 History edit1880s 1920 edit The first hospital in Wellington the Colonial Hospital was established in Thorndon in 1847 on the site of what is now Wellington Girls College 9 Built to address the needs of both Maori and pakeha it was one of the first four hospitals established by Governor George Grey 10 A new hospital was designed by architect Christian Toxward and construction of the hospital in Newtown began in 1876 using prison labour it was opened in 1881 11 12 21 Mental health patients were housed in a hospital at Mt View now Government House until a new asylum opened at Porirua in 1900 12 36 37 nbsp Staff of Wellington Hospital in 1885Between 1881 and 1912 the hospital expanded its services with six new buildings 12 48 The Victoria Operating Theatres opened in 1901 13 In 1904 a nurse s home opened and was enlarged in 1907 to accommodate 96 nurses 14 12 42 The Victoria Hospital for chronic conditions opened in 1905 12 38 15 In 1906 concern over the spread of tuberculosis TB and its treatment led to the opening of the Seddon ward chalets 12 42 16 Recognition of the need for an isolation ward to care for people with infectious diseases resulted in the acquisition of land off Coromandel St in Newtown and the opening of the first Fever Hospital in 1910 12 43 17 It was named the Ewart Hospital after medical superintendent John Ewart a new Fever Hospital was built in 1919 18 nbsp Nursery rhyme tileA children s hospital the King Edward VII Memorial Hospital opened in 1912 9 19 The hospital was decorated with 18 nursery rhyme murals made of Royal Doulton tiles which cost 800 at the time equivalent to NZD 60 000 in 2021 9 20 21 Under the Hospital and Charitable Institutions Act 1909 the Wellington Hospital Board was established in 1913 and the first elections to the board held 12 48 During World War I hospital facilities were severely strained by several factors soldiers from the Trentham Military Camp needing treatment for infectious diseases war casualties staff shortages as staff enlisted to serve in the war and the 1918 flu epidemic 12 53 54 1920s 1940s edit After World War I the hospital developed and expanded a number of specialist departments and therapies tuberculosis psychiatry cancer an ante natal clinic urogenital and urology departments a skin diseases clinic orthopaedic surgery a venereal disease clinic and cardiology clinic 12 61 67 22 23 In 1924 the foundation stone was laid for a new administration building on Riddiford St which opened in 1927 12 61 67 24 Janet Fraser wife of the future prime minister Peter Fraser served on the Board from 1925 to 1935 25 The hospital experienced severe financial difficulties in the depression 12 85 It was overcrowded and while new buildings were planned further building programmes did not proceed due to political wrangling during the late 1930s 12 85 26 During the war the hospital experienced waiting lists a shortage of staff and an influx of military patients a soldiers ward block was opened in 1941 12 90 91 A new building known as the 210 block was completed in 1944 which reduced overcrowding 12 96 27 The hospital celebrated its centenary in 1947 28 29 1950s 1970s edit From the 1950s to 1970s various plans were proposed for redevelopment of the hospital One proposed a 1200 bed hospital while another planned an 800 bed hospital Several factors had to be considered in redevelopment New specialties needed to be accommodated neurology coronary care renal dialysis respiratory research vascular surgery radiotherapy and nuclear medicine Care in the community and district nursing expanded 12 112 113 There was the projected population and needs of the Hutt Valley Porirua and the Kapiti area and the inclusion of a clinical school to train medical students 30 31 The decision to create a University of Otago clinical school was preceded by lobbying for a third medical school attached to Victoria University 12 113 In the late 1950s there was such an urgent need for new operating theatres and beds for surgical patients that a new building with these facilities opened The new theatres enabled expansion of cardiothoracic surgical services 32 Two nurses homes also opened in 1949 and 1958 32 A new block the 150 bed Seddon block opened in 1966 replacing the old Seddon ward chalets It was intended that this be a chest hospital to relieve pressure on Ewart hospital but as the numbers of TB patients had significantly declined the new block was used for cardiac renal cardiothoracic surgical and other medical patients 33 34 Three further buildings opened in the 1970s the Academic block serving as the clinical school in 1977 the Clinical Services building in 1978 the Grace Neill block named after nurse Grace Neill providing obstetric and gynaecology services in 1978 31 1980s 1990s edit The Ward support and Link blocks opened in 1980 31 Construction of new buildings required demolition of many of the older hospital buildings including the original 1881 building 35 The King Edward VII Memorial Hospital was demolished when a new children s hospital opened in 1988 36 The nursery rhyme tiles were removed from the old building and re erected by the Wellington Hospital Royal Doulton Mural Preservation Trust Inc in 1992 37 The Seddon block was also demolished in 1999 35 The 2000s edit A new emergency department ED opened in 2000 35 In 2023 the government announced plans for a new ED which would create up to date facilities in a larger building 38 39 nbsp Frontage of demolished 1927 building in 2009In May 2002 the Government approved the new regional hospital NRH Project a major redevelopment of the hospital 40 The project centred on a new main building including a new state of the art 18 bed Intensive Care Unit a new operating theatre complex and uniting the medical and surgical wards into a single building Construction began in 2004 with demolition and clearing of the site 41 This included demolishing the 1940s 210 block and the 1927 Front Block from which the entrance arches and steps were preserved and reinstated at the back of the new building 41 Construction was completed in 2008 and the new hospital was officially opened by Governor General Anand Satyanand on 6 March 2009 41 42 In early 2010 Prince William visited children in the hospital 43 In September 2022 a new child health services building the Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood Building opened Local property developers Mark Dunajtschik and Dorothy Spotswood donated 53 million towards construction of the new building 5 6 7 The building won awards from the New Zealand Institute of Architects and the Property Council in 2023 44 45 Both the main hospital building and the child health services building have base isolators to minimise damage during an earthquake 46 47 Nurses Memorial Chapel edit nbsp Stained glass window in chapel 2023The Nurses Memorial Chapel was only one of three chapels in New Zealand dedicated to the memory of nurses the other two being at Christchurch Hospital and Waikato Hospital 48 13 Planning for a Nurses Memorial Chapel began in 1933 and extensive fundraising commenced in 1934 using the profit from a nursing reunion 49 Donations of money were received from individuals patients bequests community appeals and house to house collections 49 By 1961 28 000 had been raised equivalent to NZD 670 000 in 2021 enough to allow architects to draw up plans and to accept a tender for construction 48 25 In addition to raising funds to construct the chapel many of the fixtures and fittings such as pews kneelers a lecturn and font were also donated 49 The foundation stone was laid in November 1964 on a site south of the nurses homes close to Riddiford St 48 26 The chapel was opened on 30 October 1965 by the Governor General Sir Bernard Fergusson s wife Lady Laura Fergusson 48 29 nbsp St John Ambulance stained glass window in chapel 2023A notable feature of the building was the stained glass windows in the north wall designed by Beverley Shore Bennett and Martin Roestenburg 48 42 In 1965 when the chapel opened the 72 windows were filled with coloured glass but by 2001 this was replaced in 51 windows by stained glass designs 48 41 42 The subjects of and depictions in the windows were varied saints and apostles Saint Fabiola Florence Nightingale s lamp the New Zealand Registered Nurses NZRN badge the staff and snake of Asclepius the original hospital at Pipitea St the 1981 centennial of the hospital the centenary of the School of Nursing in 1983 and the St John Ambulance which incorporated Maori kowhaiwhai pattern and the mangopare hammerhead shark motif Many of the windows were dedicated to former staff of the hospital 48 44 58 The chapel was well used for services attended by both staff and patients and as a place for quiet reflection However the number of religious services declined over the years and in 2000 the chapel became a Nursing Education Centre 48 58 62 The chapel was demolished in 2004 to make way for redevelopment on the hospital site 50 The stained glass windows were removed before demolition and stored until 2010 when most were re installed by Olaf Wehr Candler in the chapel in the new hospital building 51 Notable staff editEric Anson anaesthetist Campbell Begg doctor Agnes Bennett one of the first women doctors Charles Burns doctor Ellen Dougherty nurse James Elliott first house surgeon and later surgeon John Ewart medical superintendent Truby King medical superintendent Kate Marsden matron 52 Nina Muir first woman house surgeon Grace Neill nurse Daisy Platts Mills one of the first women doctorsSee also editHospitals in the Wellington RegionReferences edit New Zealand Out of Hospital Major Trauma Destination Policy Lower North Island Area PDF National Trauma Network Te Hononga Whetuki a Motu February 2017 University of Otago Wellington About the University of Otago Wellington www otago ac nz Retrieved 2023 07 24 Wellington Hospital Ministry of Health Profile health govt nz Ministry of Health Wellington Hospital Mental Health Services Ministry of Health Profile health govt nz Ministry of Health a b New children s hospital Te Wao Nui opens in Wellington 1 News Retrieved 2023 04 06 a b New 110m children s hospital opens in Wellington thanks to fairy godparents Newshub Retrieved 2023 04 06 a b Thomas Rachel 2022 12 30 New Year Honours Mark Dunajtschik a knight just 3 years after becoming a Kiwi Stuff Retrieved 2023 04 06 After hours and emergency care CCDHB www ccdhb org nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 a b c King Edward VII Memorial Hospital for Children opened 13th March 1912 Wellington 1912 OCLC 155838330 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link The Thorndon Hospitals ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 10 Newtown Hospitals ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 10 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Barber L Towers R J 1976 Wellington hospital 1847 1976 Wellington Hospital Board OCLC 4179287 Initial expansion Operating Theatre under construction ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Initial expansion A New Nurses Home ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Initial expansion Victoria Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Initial expansion The Seddon shelters ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Longer term planning Fever Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Longer term planning Fever Ewart Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Longer term planning Children s Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Wellington Children s Hospital Te Ara 2018 Retrieved 10 July 2023 Longer term planning Inside the Childrens sic Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 The 1920s More facilities required ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 The 1920s The first Cardiology Department ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 The 1920s The Hospital in 1927 ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 Stace Hilary 2006 Fraser Janet Te Ara the Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 16 November 2023 The 1930s 1040s A costly project ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 The 1930s 1940s The 210 Block completed ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 The 1930s 1940s 1947 Centenary ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 26 Wellington Hospital Press 10 September 1947 p 2 Retrieved 27 July 2023 via Papers Past The 1950s 1960s Plans for redevelopment ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 a b c The 1950s 1960s Plans for a new Wellington Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 a b The 1950s 1960s The hospital in 1960 ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 The 1950s 1960s The new Seddon wing ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 The 1950s 1960s The new Seddon wing completed ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 a b c The last 10 years ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 30 Down with the old The new Children s Hospital ndhadeliver natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 23 Duke Jan Bamford Anita 2003 Wellington Hospital 2003 a photographic essay Kapiti Print Media pp 31 39 63 ISBN 0476001846 Knell Conor 2023 06 09 Wellington Hospital s emergency department to get new beds revamped assessment area Stuff Retrieved 2023 07 30 Government announces significant expansion of Wellington Regional Hospital ED The Beehive 10 June 2023 Retrieved 2023 07 30 Wellington Regional Hospital plan gets go ahead The Beehive Retrieved 2020 09 24 a b c New regional hospital Capital and Coast District Health Board Retrieved 25 September 2020 Wellington Regional Hospital opening gg govt nz Retrieved 2020 09 24 Prince William popular at Wellington Hospital Otago Daily Times Online News 2010 01 19 Retrieved 2023 07 10 2023 Wellington Architecture Awards Winners NZ Institute of Architects www nzia co nz 18 May 2023 Retrieved 2023 07 23 Innovative Te Wao Nui Wellington Children s Hospital Receives Top Honours At 2023 Property Industry Awards www scoop co nz 24 June 2023 Retrieved 2023 07 23 Base Isolation Wellington City Council 2014 05 21 Retrieved 2023 08 02 Macandrew Ruby 2019 08 19 State of the art base isolation system for Wellington s new children s hospital Stuff Retrieved 2023 08 02 a b c d e f g h Stevenson Annette 2001 Wellington Hospital Nurses Memorial Chapel Palmerston North Dunmore Press ISBN 0908719124 OCLC 155711454 a b c Crossman Ethel February 1966 Nurses Memorial Chapel New Zealand Nursing Journal 59 2 22 23 Wellington Hospital Nurses Memorial Chapel natlib govt nz Retrieved 2023 07 25 The Hospital Chapel Wellington Hospital Chaplaincy Trust 2011 11 28 Retrieved 2023 07 25 KATE MARSDEN The Barrier Miner Broken Hill NSW National Library of Australia 28 August 1894 p 2 Retrieved 6 March 2014 Further reading editMacDonald Wilson D 1948 A Hundred Years of Healing Wellington Hospital 1847 1947 Wellington AW amp AH Reed External links editTe Whatu Ora Capital Coast and Hutt Valley Wellington Hospital s Intensive Care Unit Wellington Hospital Senior Medical and Dental Staff at NDHA National Library of New Zealand41 18 31 S 174 46 46 E 41 3086 S 174 7794 E 41 3086 174 7794 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wellington Hospital New Zealand amp oldid 1185809245, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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