Victoria ready for biggest hospital project in Australia’s history

By Our Reporter
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Representative image // Photo by JAFAR AHMED on Unsplash

The Labor Government will deliver the biggest hospital project in Australia’s history, with massive upgrades to the Royal Melbourne Hospital and the Royal Women’s Hospital and the construction of a new Arden medical precinct—giving patients from right across Victoria the very best of care—connected by a brand new train line.

Every year, more than 45,000 patients are transferred from our regions and suburbs to be treated at the Royal Melbourne Hospital (RMH). The Women’s delivers more than 9,000 babies and cares for more than 2,000 babies in its neonatal intensive care unit annually, as well as treating women from all over Victoria, according to an official press release.

The Labor government said it will make sure these hospitals can keep providing exceptional care for generations to come.

The RMH and the Women’s have suffered savage, repeated attacks from the Liberals. When Matthew Guy was a key adviser to Jeff Kennett, the Liberals closed beds and sacked doctors, nurses, pharmacists, cooks, and cleaners at both hospitals—described at the time as cuts that led to ‘third world conditions,’ the release said.

Australia’s biggest ever health infrastructure project with a $5-$6 billion upgrade and expansion is expected to deliver a total of more than 1,800 beds and treatment spaces.

The government will make an initial investment of $2-$2.5 billion to start what will be a 12-year project, establishing a new medical precinct in the future suburb of Arden which will be home to new campuses of both hospitals.

The Arden campuses will be centres for elective surgery, outpatient treatment, clinical trials, rehabilitation and low-risk women’s healthcare services, while the redeveloped Parkville sites will focus on emergency, trauma and acute care.

Put simply, if you’re seeing a heart specialist, you’ll visit your doctor at RMH Arden—and if you’re having a heart attack you’ll be taken to the RMH Parkville, the release said.

Similarly, pregnant women will have their outpatient appointments at the Women’s Arden campus, and if they are experiencing complications, give birth at the Women’s campus in Parkville.

The project will provide a major boost to health system capacity every year, including:

  • An additional 10,500 elective procedures, through 8 new theatres at the RMH Arden campus
  • Enabling 1,000 more patients to receive critical care across both campuses
  • Capacity for 2,500 more births at the Women’s

A new Home-Based Care Hub will become the centre of home care coordination between health services, hospitals and patients—to ensure modern and convenient in-home care to Victorians.

The initial investment will fund the first stage of works, delivering the first hospital tower in the Arden precinct—creating more than 400 beds and treatment spaces.

The first stage is expected to create 7,500 construction jobs, and around 12,500 more in the supply chain for the project.

The next stages will rebuild and expand the hospital buildings at Parkville, delivering two world-class upgrades for RMH and the Women’s.

The project will deliver additional education and research space to ensure the hospitals are training our future healthcare workers to work at health services across the state.

The redevelopment will support further collaboration with the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute and other medical research partners to work on ways to better integrate teaching, training and research with patient care.

The Parkville and Arden medical precincts will also be linked by the Metro Tunnel. From 2025, both will have brand-new train stations, making it a two-minute trip between hospital campuses and connecting them to the Monash Medical Centre in Clayton.

Creating these important links will make it easy for healthcare workers, patients and visitors from across the state to travel to each campus.

Once the Suburban Rail Loop is complete, the Parkville and Arden medical precincts will be connected to other important health sites such as the Box Hill Hospital and the Austin Hospital.

The government is also delivering a $270 million healthcare workforce package to provide free degrees, training and upskilling for the next generation of nurses and midwives – and with this redevelopment, giving healthcare workers more training spaces than ever before to up-skill within the hospital system.


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