St Clement's Hospital

St Clements Hospital
Tower Hamlets District Health Authority
St Clements Hospital
Shown in Tower Hamlets
Geography
Location London
Coordinates 51°31′33″N 0°1′46″W / 51.52583°N 0.02944°W / 51.52583; -0.02944Coordinates: 51°31′33″N 0°1′46″W / 51.52583°N 0.02944°W / 51.52583; -0.02944
Organisation
Care system NHS England
Services
Emergency department No
History
Founded 1874
Closed 2005

St Clements Hospital was a mental health hospital in Mile End, in the East End of London.

History

The building opened in a former workhouse building as the City of London Union Infirmary in 1874.[1] The palatial design of the workhouse had been created by architect Richard Tress and had cost over £55,000 to construct, boasted central heating, a dining-hall measuring 100 feet by 50 feet, Siberian marble pillars, and a chapel with stained glass windows and a new organ. It closed in 1909 but re-opened as a hospital for chronically ill people becoming known as the City of London Institution in 1912 and as the Bow Institution in 1913.[1] It became a psychiatric unit, known as St Clement's Hospital, in 1936 and joined the National Health Service in 1948.[1] It came under the same management as the London Hospital in 1968.[1] After services were transferred to a new Adult Mental Health Facility at Mile End Hospital, the hospital closed in February 2006.[2]

Following the hospital closure the site was transferred to English Partnerships, then to the Homes and Communities Agency, and eventually the Greater London Authority, who marketed it as a regeneration opportunity in 2011. The Government announced that the site would be managed by London's first Community Land Trust. Mayor of London Boris Johnson broke the ground on the site in March 2014. The house rents will not be based upon the open market rate but instead will be linked to the average mean salaries in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets. The formula will be reapplied every time a house within the Trust is sold, creating what organisers describe as "truly and permanently affordable housing".[3]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 "St Clements Hospital". Lost Hospitals of London. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  2. "Hospitals". Derelict London. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  3. "The half-price houses coming soon to east London". The Guardian. 27 March 2014. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
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