The St George’s Health and Wellbeing Hub is an exemplar of the transformation of primary care services, bringing together primary care, mental health and prevention services along with cancer care and dialysis in purpose-built premises.
Transforming primary care
The hub provides a base for a team of health and care professionals delivering a new model of integrated care, enabling patients to speak to a range of professionals in a single visit.
By bringing care closer to home and with a bigger focus on prevention, early-intervention and wellbeing, the new hub will support people to live well for longer and reduce the number of hospital visits and admissions.
The hub will provide space for a range of local voluntary, community and support groups working to improve the health and wellbeing of local residents, and includes a community café, multi-purpose education and meeting spaces and a sensory, dementia-friendly communal garden.
Cross-borough partnership
The hub will serve people in the boroughs of Havering, Redbridge and Barking and Dagenham from the site of the former St George’s Hospital, a 29-acre community hospital decommissioned in 2013. Much of the site was sold in 2017, leaving around 4.5 acres for a healthcare development.
Instrumental in the plans were local GPs working with NHS partners from North East London NHS Foundation Trust (NELFT), NHS North East London, Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust (BHRUT) and Barts Health.
A hybrid of modern and traditional construction
McLaren will be using a hybrid of traditional and modern methods of construction for the three-storey building.
Off-site manufacturing of some components is encouraged in public sector projects and brings multiple benefits. It reduces the total construction programme time and the amount of construction traffic, minimising disruption to neighbouring residents. It will also improve safety during construction, improve the quality of the completed building and reduce site waste.
