Green Light for New Renal Unit at St. George's


New facility aims to transform services for kidney patients

CGI of planned renal unit at St George's Hospital. Picture: BDP Architects/St George\'s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
CGI of planned renal unit at St George's Hospital. Picture: BDP Architects/St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

January 16, 2025

St. George’s Hospital will open a specialist centre for kidney patients as part of a major revamp. Wandsworth Council has approved plans for a new renal unit in Tooting, aiming to transform kidney care for patients across south west London

Renal services currently provided at St George’s and St Helier Hospital, in Sutton, will be moved to the unit under the plans from St George’s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (SGUH). The move aims to improve care and dialysis services for kidney patients.

Application documents said the two existing renal units, which serve a population of around 2.7 million people, suffer from long-term underinvestment. This has resulted in the buildings ‘not being fit for purpose and neither service is as efficient as it should be’, according to the documents.

The council’s planning committee unanimously approved plans for the new unit at St George’s on January 14. Conservative councillor Guy Humphries praised the design of the building at the meeting.

After the meeting, Dr James Marsh, group deputy chief executive for St George’s, Epsom and St Helier University Hospitals and Health Group, said: “Reaching this milestone is a huge achievement, and means we’re a big step closer to transforming the care we provide to our kidney patients. This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to bring together the best of our two excellent renal services in a state-of-the-art, purpose-built renal hospital at St George’s – and we’re ready to press forward and deliver on our plans.”

The unit will be built on a former car park at St George’s to the south east of the Atkinson Morley Wing. It will be a six-storey building with 89 beds across inpatient wards, including higher acuity beds, day care beds and bariatric beds. It will have 24 acute dialysis stations, a surgical ward, offices and a courtyard garden with seats for staff and visitors.

CGI of planned renal unit at St George's Hospital. Picture: BDP Architects/St George\'s University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
CGI of interior of planned renal unit at St George's Hospital. Picture: BDP Architects/St George's University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

The documents said, “The new specialist centre will bring expert staff together onto one site and help the trust to provide 24/7 care for kidney patients on long-term dialysis requiring inpatient care and for patients who need more complex care such as a kidney transplant.

“Focusing specialist renal care in one location will also open up more opportunities for patients to take part in clinical trials, and for clinicians to gather more valuable data regarding effective treatments. The development of a purpose-built unit means that resources can be used more effectively and provide more patient beds and increase capacity for treatments.”

Council officers ruled the scheme will represent a ‘meaningful and much-needed expansion of critical healthcare infrastructure’ in Wandsworth.

The scheme is part of the trust’s 2021-2031 estate strategy, which outlines an eight-phase plan to replace existing buildings at the hospital. Phase zero involves the construction of a new intensive care unit, which was approved by the council in August. The new renal unit will follow as phase one of the plan.