Birmingham Super Hospital

The Birmingham Super Hospital is a hospital under construction in Birmingham, England. It is slated to replace Selly Oak Hospital and the Queen Elizabeth Hospital on its completion in 2010. The scheme is part of a £1 billion urban regeneration plan for Selly Oak which includes the construction of a £350 million retail development and the construction of new roads. Plans for the super hospital were unveiled in 1998 and was approved by Birmingham City Council in October 2004 after the design was unveiled earlier that year.

It is part of the University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and part of a PFI with Consort Healthcare Ltd. There were problems with the scheme when plans for Consort to sign the deal fell through in March 2005. A deal was signed in early 2006.

It was designed by BDP Architects and construction commenced in 2006. Five tower cranes are being used during construction with one being noted by locals due to its height. The first part to be completed was the £12 million multi-storey car park. A further £30 million was spent on preparing the site for construction. As part of the complex are three 63 metre tall towers, each 14 storeys tall. These will contain the inpatient wards. A skybridge will lead from one of the towers to the retained estate which contains the departments of Oncology, the pharmacy and the Wellcome Research Centre. As well as providing patient care, there will be an education centre and retail outlets. The main atrium will have a glass roof.

Upon completion in summer 2010, it is expected to have cost £559 million and be the first hospital to be built in the city for over 70 years. The hospital will provide 1,105 beds. Initially, there was going to be 1,213 beds, however, the trust reduced the number of beds by 108 although said that there will still be room for the extra 108 beds if they received extra funding. 94 beds will be taken from the inpatient wards and 13 from the day care surgery wards.