New Lancaster Infirmary hit with delay that will push it back to the late 2030s

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com 
and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565
Visit Shots! now
Building work on a planned new hospital for Lancaster will not now begin until the second half of the 2030s - the point by which the facility had previously been expected to open.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting has confirmed that funding will be made available for the project after the Labour government completed its review of the “40 new hospitals" pledge made by the previous Conservative administration. He told the Commons that all of the previously-announced facilities will still go ahead.

However, the new Royal Lancaster Infirmary and Royal Preston Hospital are amongst nine hospitals that have now been placed in a third and final wave of work - with construction set to start on the the Lancaster site between 2035 and 2038 and on Preston facility, which is a specialist and major trauma centre for the whole of Lancashire and South Cumbria, sometime between 2037 and 2039.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Cost estimates have also been published, putting an estimated price tag on the new Royal Lancaster of £1-1.5bn.

Work will not start on the new Royal Lancaser until at least 2035 - and possibly as late as 2038.  A site at Bailrigg, close to the M6, is currently the preferred place to build it.Work will not start on the new Royal Lancaser until at least 2035 - and possibly as late as 2038.  A site at Bailrigg, close to the M6, is currently the preferred place to build it.
Work will not start on the new Royal Lancaser until at least 2035 - and possibly as late as 2038. A site at Bailrigg, close to the M6, is currently the preferred place to build it.

The timetable for the two projects had already been pushed back by the last Tory government 18 months ago, when its previous commitment that all 40 new hospitals would be open by 2030 was scrapped.

In May 2023, then health secretary Steve Barclay announced that the Royal Lancaster and Royal Preston would become part of “a rolling programme of work” – which would run beyond 2030 – after existing facilities elsewhere in the country affected by dangerous concrete were prioritised for replacement.

Although no specific date was given for when the now post-2030 hospitals would be open, the Lancaster Guardian revealed at the time that the expectation amongst local NHS leaders in Lancashire was that they would be ready by the mid-2030s.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Just last month, Andrew Bennett, the New Hospitals Programme system lead for Lancashire and South Cumbria, told a meeting of Lancashire County Council’s health scrutiny committee: “When I talk about the New Hospitals Programme, I’m typically talking about 10 years of work between where we are now and new facilities [opening].”

But he stressed that there were “caveats” – not least, the outcome of the current government’s review.

Now, under the new timetable, it is possible that the first bricks will not be laid until the tail end of the next decade – which would push the opening dates well into the 2040s.

The completion of the review comes less than two months after the NHS in Lancashire and South Cumbria announced that it had bought two sites where it is proposing to build the new Lancaster and Preston hospitals – while stressing it had an “exit strategy” should the government funding not ultimately be forthcoming.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A public engagement exercise to get residents’ opinions on the proposed new locations – at Bailrigg, near Lancaster University, for the Royal Lancaster and in the Farington area of South Ribble, for the Royal Preston – began last week. No final decisions have been taken and the NHS in the region says it is still open to suggestions of other possible sites.

Reacting to the revised timetable for the Royal Lancaster Infirmary, Lancaster and Wyre MP Cat Smith said: “It’s right that the government needs to be nimble and respond to the discovery of RAAC [concrete at risk of collapse] in other hospitals - and prioritise buildings that are structurally more vulnerable than ours.

“I hope the extra lead-in time will enable us to have a more thorough consultation and plan to build the best possible hospital to meet the needs of North Lancashire and South Cumbria.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Promises, promises

In his statement in the Commons on Monday afternoon, Wes Streeting accused the Conservatives of “making promises that they never intended on keeping” about when new hospitals – and other facilities he said were wrongly labelled as such – would be open. He said Labour had put the New Hospital Programme on a firm financial footing and given the public “an honest, realistic, deliverable timetable that they can believe in”.

However, Tory shadow health secretary Edward Agar said Labour were guilty of making “all sorts of promises…to win power”.

“He added: “The Secretary of State was quoted in the Evening Standard [newspaper] in June of last year saying…’We are committed to delivering the New Hospitals Programme.’

“But these are seemingly hollow words now those hospitals are at risk, with investments and upgrades that they deserve pushed back, in some cases, potentially to start as late as 2039.”

How to have your say on the new Royal Lancaster Infirmary

The engagement survey can be taken here.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

To complete the survey by phone or to request a hard copy to complete and send back by post, call 0300 373 3550 or email [email protected]

Public engagement events will be held at:

***Lancaster Town Hall – Monday 3rd February, 5.30pm to 7pm

***Morecambe Football Club – Wednesday 12th February, 5.30pm to 7pm

***The Forum, Barrow – Wednesday 19th February, 5.30pm to 7pm

***Lancaster University – Friday 14th March, 10am to 11.30am

***Brewery Arts Centre, Kendal – Thursday 20th March, 10am to 11.30am

Related topics:

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.

News you can trust since 1837
Follow us
©National World Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Cookie SettingsTerms and ConditionsPrivacy notice