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Construction partner appointed for new Cambridge Children’s Hospital

Work to build the first specialist children's hospital for the East of England has reached a new milestone, with the appointment of a construction partner.

A group of people looking smart and smiling in front of the Cambridge Children's Hospital bright blue hoardings with the logo to the left
Members of the Cambridge Children's Hospital team with representatives from Bouygues UK

The Cambridge Children’s Hospital (CCH) project has appointed Bouygues UK as its construction partner for a ground-breaking new hospital that will redefine how we care for children and young people.

The hospital will unite mental and physical healthcare with world-leading life sciences research in a whole new way, treating mind and body as one to help tackle stigma and speed up diagnoses. Staff will care for the Whole Child – their health and well-being, individual educational needs, and their family.

The facility will be the first specialist children’s hospital for the East of England, the only region in the UK without one. Bringing together clinical excellence from two NHS Trusts with pioneering research from the University of Cambridge, the new five-storey 35,000sqm hospital will be based at the heart of the Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Europe’s largest biomedical campus. Fundraising for the new Hospital is over halfway to its £100m target, attracting support from philanthropists in the UK and around the globe.

Matt Allen, Director of New Hospital Construction at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CUH), described the appointment of a construction partner as a "major milestone" and said the team were delighted to be working with Bouygues UK.

A man with grey hair, a grey suit and blue shirt standing in front of a building site with heras fencing and shrubland
Matt Allen, Director of New Hospital Construction, Cambridge University Hospitals

Bouygues UK is a first-class contractor with proven expertise in building and delivering excellent healthcare infrastructure within a collaborative environment. This makes them an ideal construction partner to deliver such an important project. Together we can now get straight down to work in finalising our design and plans and ensuring best value for money under an initial pre-construction services agreement.

Matt Allen, Director of New Hospital Construction at Cambridge University Hospitals

Bouygues Construction has delivered over 400 healthcare facilities globally, including the major new cancer and surgery centre for the University College London Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (UCLH) Grafton Way Building, a complex 13-storey facility with a state-of-the-art proton beam therapy centre. The firm are currently leading the build of Oriel, the joint initiative between Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology and Moorfields Eye Charity to build a new integrated centre for advancing eye health in Camden and the new Ambulatory Diagnostic Centre at West Middlesex University Hospital. They recently delivered the University of Cambridge’s Cavendish Laboratory known as the Ray Dolby Centre, pioneering the future of scientific research and innovation.

A woman with blond hair, a navy nurse uniform and bright yellow cardigan, standing on a the children's hospital future building site, pointing to a location on an architect floorplan. She is showing this to people standing around her
Vicky Amiss-Smith, Lead Nurse, talks through the floorplans with the teams from Bouygues and Cambridge Children's Hospital

Children, young people, parents and carers have been, and will continue to be, at the forefront of shaping how Cambridge Children’s Hospital will look, feel and care. The project’s Youth Forum and Young Adult Forum have been contributing ideas around the design of the hospital, based on their own lived experiences of attending hospital and using mental health services.

Katie Birditt has been Chair of the Cambridge Children’s Hospital Youth and Young Adult Forum for the past year. She said it was amazing to see the hospital finally becoming a reality.

A young woman with long golden brown hair and a patterned beige shirt standing in front of the bright blue Cambridge Children's Hospital hoardings. She is smiling
Katie Birditt, Chair of Cambridge Children's Hospital Youth and Young Adult Forums

Knowing that there will be a place built just for children and young people—where mental and physical health are treated together—fills me with hope. I’m really proud to be part of something that’s going to help so many families in the future.

Katie Birditt, Chair, Cambridge Children's Youth and Young Adult Forums

Spread over six floors, the hospital will include 108 inpatient beds, 16 paediatric intensive care beds, 42 day-case beds, seven operating theatres, imaging and diagnostics, and a hospital school. A world-leading 5000 sqm research institute will be embedded, bringing University of Cambridge researchers and NHS clinicians together in one place, to create a collaborative and multi-disciplinary environment dedicated to improving the health of children and young people.

This truly is an exciting moment for the project. We are bringing specialist care closer to home so children and families across the East of England will have better, more equitable access to the care they need – with less time away from school, home and community.

Professor Isobel Heyman, Clinical Co-Lead for Mental Health, Cambridge Children's Hospital

Professor Heyman said the collaboration with research and industry partners on the Cambridge Biomedical Campus will develop new life science, genomic medicine and data-driven approaches to treat illness earlier and more precisely.

Speaking about the vision of treating mental and physical health together, she continued: “Many children and young people with mental health conditions also have a physical condition, and vice versa. Cambridge Children’s Hospital will provide a truly holistic approach that currently doesn’t exist in the UK, Europe or anywhere else.”

A look inside Cambridge Children's Hospital: Watch the fly through

Link: https://youtu.be/J7ZOmydg1Lg

The hospital has been designed by Hawkins\Brown in partnership with White Arkitekter and Ramboll. Mace Consult is providing project management services on the project with EDGE leading on cost control.

A man with dark grey hair on the sides and a dark grey beard, wearing a dark blue suit and stripy shirt. He is standing on the Cambridge children's Hospital future building site
Philippe Bernard, Chair and CEO Bouygues UK

We are honoured to lead on the construction of this pioneering project which embodies our commitment to innovation, sustainability, and building for life. We look forward to working closely with all partners to bring this ground-breaking vision to life, setting new standards in healthcare for children.

Philippe Bernard, Chair and CEO Bouygues UK

Plans for Cambridge Children’s Hospital demonstrate the fulfilment of the big shifts in the new NHS 10-year Health Plan. Through its integrated care model and embedded research institute, the regional facility will focus on the prevention and early diagnosis of diseases.

The clinical teams also plan to use new technologies for remote consultations and smart monitoring, as well as taking expertise into communities through outreach clinics, or in facilities closer to where families live across the East of England.

Addenbrooke’s Charitable Trust, the University of Cambridge and Head to Toe Charity are fundraising to secure additional significant donations needed for Cambridge Children’s Hospital.

The announcement of the construction partner is an exciting step forward, and its campaign board is working closely with fundraisers to stimulate fundraising efforts to realise the project. The Hospital will be funded with the generous support of HM Treasury, NHS partners and philanthropy.

Following ministerial approval for its Outline Business Case in August 2024, the project team are currently developing the Full Business Case and will now work with Bouygues to establish a construction timeline, anticipating that construction will start within the next 18 months.

A group of children, with some wearing builders hard hats, listening to a man who is animatedly explaining about the archeological dig going on behind him, on the Cambridge Children's Hospital site during pre construction works
Last year, young members of Cambridge Children's Network visited the site to find out more about pre construction works and the archaeological dig
  • Group photo at top of article: L-R: Claire Stoneham, CUH Director of Strategy and Major Projects; Gordon Smith, Lead for CCRI Perinatal Centre; Malcolm McFrederick, CCH Project Director; Neil Pixsley, Bouygues UK Project Director; Luc Desplanques, Bouygues UK Project Operations Director; Damien Ginguenaud, Bouygues UK Pre-construction Director; Vicky Amiss-Smith, CCH Lead Nurse; Matt Allen, Director of New Hospital Construction; Katie Birditt, Chair of Youth and Young Adult Forums; Philippe Bernard, Bouygues UK CEO and Chair; Sarah Asbury, Parent Advocate; Steve Grange, CEO, CPFT; and Colin Boyd, Bouygues UK Design Director