How a Victorian hospital became a forward-focused university department

Edinburgh Futures Institure corridor

Source: Hufton+Crow

When the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh moved to a new site on the edge of the city, the old hospital was left to rot because of its uncompromising layout. Two decades later it has been reinvented as the Edinburgh Futures Institute, an educational initative which seeks to help solve the ...

A new, state-of-the-art hospital is always welcome, particularly when it replaces a crumbling Victorian building that had huge, open wards connected off a long, central corridor.

Ordinary buildings can be flattened, but what should be done with architecturally special, listed hospitals built with such a singular purpose?

This is a question the people of Edinburgh have been exercised by ever since the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh moved from its location in the old town to a new PFI hospital on the edge of the city in 2003.

The abandoned building is a fine example of Scottish baronial architecture, resplendent with a multitude of circular towers topped by conical roofs, gable ends and an imposing clock tower complete with spire. Unsurprisingly, it is category A listed.

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