Skip to main content

News stories

Minister marks start of ACAD Centre construction

Published on 23/03/2021

Paediatrics patient Isobel Taylor and Public Governor Keith Fielding bury a time capsule to mark the start of construction on the ACAD Centre.
Paediatrics patient Isobel Taylor and Public Governor Keith Fielding bury a time capsule to mark the start of construction on the ACAD Centre.

Minister of State for Health Edward Argar MP officially marked the start of construction of Heartlands Hospital’s £28.2m Ambulatory Care and Diagnostics(ACAD) Centre on Thursday 3 December 2020.

The Minister virtually joined Heartlands Hospital staff, patients and members of the local community to see paediatrics patient Isobel Taylor, aged 11, and Public Governor Keith Fielding bury a time capsule in celebration of the start of main construction of the new building .

Buried during Heartlands Hospital’s 125th Anniversary, the time capsule, filled with memorabilia and messages, represents the hospital’s rich history as well as its exciting future to come.

The new £98.2m centre is due to open in October 2022 and will house a range of services, including outpatients, endoscopy, day case surgery and imaging, and will care for nearly half a million patients each year.

The four-storey building next to the hospital's main entrance will cover a 16,000m2 footprint, with each floor being around 3,600m2 – approximately half the size of Wembley Stadium’s pitch.

The ACAD Centre development was one of 20 NHS capital development projects to be awarded funding by the Department of Health and Social Care in August 2019.

Dr David Rosser, Chief Executive of University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust (UHB), said: “We thought a time capsule was a nice way to capture our memories, right from when Heartlands was called Little Bromwich and was known as an infectious diseases hospital, to now, so our future colleagues can see how much the hospital has changed, and hopefully offering future generations a glimpse of what the hospital means to people in 2020. One of the ways we will be doing that is through ACAD.

“The new build will boost the Trust’s capacity to meet the evolving healthcare requirements of local people, with modern purpose-fit facilities to deliver the best possible care and high-quality specialist services. The start of construction of ACAD is a momentous occasion for staff and patients across Birmingham and Solihull, and it is only fitting that the time capsule is buried in the grounds of the new build.”

Please visit the ACAD pages email The Big Build team for more information.

More news

Patient Karl Roberts having the procedure aided by virtual reality

Virtual reality helps ease the pain for patients

A pioneering virtual reality approach is being tried out on people having a kidney stone removed

Dr Pijush Ray, Good Hope Hospital's new Medical Director

New Medical Director for Good Hope Hospital

Dr Pijush Ray, currently Deputy Chief Medical Officer and Health Care of the Elderly Consultant at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust, will join Good Hope Hospital as its new Medical Director.

Dr Vanja Giljaca, Dr Shafqat Mehmood, and Dr Monzur Ahmed

‘First of its kind’ operation a success

A team at Good Hope Hospital successfully performed a unique type of pancreatic surgery, the first of its kind at the hospital.

Read more news