Princess Alexandra hospital rebuild delayed until at least 2030

Setting out a new timetable, Mr Streeting said construction of new hospitals across the country would proceed in four "waves"

Princess Alexandra Hospital
Author: Isabella HudsonPublished 20th Jan 2025

Building the 40 new hospitals, including the Princess Alexandra in Harlow, promised by the previous government will take at least a decade longer than planned, the Health Secretary has said.

Wes Streeting accused the Conservatives of failing to fund their government's 2019 promise of providing the new facilities by 2030, saying the pledge had been "built on the shaky foundation of false hope".

Setting out a new timetable, Mr Streeting said construction of the new hospitals would proceed in four "waves", with the final part not beginning until between 2035 and 2039.

The first wave is already under construction, and set to be completed in the next three years.

Wave two schemes will now begin main construction between 2030 and 2035, including at Princess Alexandra Hospital.

Mr Streeting said the new timetable was "honest, funded and can actually be delivered".

He added: "It is a serious, credible plan to build the hospitals our NHS needs."

Promising that all the new units would be delivered, Mr Streeting said he had secured investment averaging £3 billion a year, which he described as part of the largest capital investment in the NHS since the previous Labour government.

He also announced a new framework for contracting out construction of the new hospitals, saying this would ensure the new facilities were delivered "as quickly as possible".

Documents released by the Department for Health and Social Care suggested the programme would not reach the £3 billion per year figure until it had reached a "steady state" in the early 2030s, with the "pre-construction phase" requiring less spending.

The announcement follows a review of the Conservatives' £20 billion New Hospitals Programme, which Mr Streeting launched shortly after taking office in July, claiming the previous government's plans were undeliverable and had not been properly funded.

But shadow health secretary Edward Argar said Mr Streeting had put progress made under the previous government "at risk" by "kicking the can down the road".

He said: "Today's announcement will come as a bitter blow to trusts, staff and crucially patients who believed the party opposite and will now be left waiting even longer for vital investment.

"Yet again, before the election, they talked the talk, but it's patients who lose out when this Government fails to deliver."

The Liberal Democrats accused the Government of trying to "bury bad news" on the day of Donald Trump's inauguration as US president.

Helen Morgan, the party's health spokesperson, said: "Instead of ducking scrutiny, the Health Secretary needs to publish the full impact assessment of these delays.

"Patients have a right to know just how at risk they are, and how many more delays they will have to suffer as a result of the Government's decision."

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