THE next stage of Armidale Hospital’s $60 million redevelopment is solidifying, following another successful concrete pour by construction crews late last week.
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The new third floor section will house the perioperative suite and day surgery facilities, catering for patients undergoing elective surgery.
When the hospital opens early next year, the floor will be abuzz with specialists and nurses, taking on advanced clinical tasks.
It will also see four new theatres, doubling the capacity of the current hospital.
The New England-based Richard Crookes Constructions team say they’re progressing ahead of schedule, with well-timed rain falling between major milestones.
Project Manager Chris Petrov says the floors are now 75 per cent complete.
“We poured 420 cubic metres of concrete when the third floor slab was poured last Thursday,” Mr Petrov said.
“Now we’re progressing for the fourth and final slab to be poured, which should occur in about three-and-a-half weeks.”
Northern Tablelands MP Adam Marshall toured the site on Monday to inspect the progress made since the sod-turning in November last year.
“It’s incredible that in just months this huge building has sprung up, seemingly from nowhere,” he said.
I pass by on most days, but it’s when you stand on top that you realise what how quickly it’s coming together,” he said.
Mr Marshall said the whole region would benefit from the new building.
“People from across the Northern Tablelands often had to travel for medical help – when this floor is fully operational, it will mean most won’t have to travel nearly as far,” he said.
It may not look like much now – but this is a perfect blank slate upon which we’ll draw up our hospital of the future.”
The next and final pour will be for the Central Sterile Serviced Department.
That pour is expected to happen mid-March, with the final section of steel roofing to follow shortly thereafter.
The first floor, housing the new and expanded Emergency Department, is already being fitted out by local tradespeople slightly ahead of schedule.