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Rushford Court

Coordinates:54°46′43″N1°35′05″W/ 54.77859°N 1.58472°W/54.77859; -1.58472
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Rushford Court
Rushford Court in 2019
Rushford Court is located in County Durham
Rushford Court
Shown in County Durham
Former namesCounty Hospital, Durham
General information
TypeStudent residence; formerly hospital (closed 2010)
Town or cityDurham
CountryUK
Coordinates54°46′43″N1°35′05″W/ 54.77859°N 1.58472°W/54.77859; -1.58472
Named forHannah Rushford, Mayor of Durham
Completed1853
Renovated2018
OwnerUnite Students
Other information
Number of rooms363
Website
https://www.unitestudents.com/durham/rushford-court

Rushford Courtis a student hall and former hospital inDurham, England.It opened in 1853 asCounty Hospital,and closed as a hospital in 2010 after services were moved toLanchester Road Hospitalon the outskirts of the city.

In 2018, after extensive work to demolish later additions to the hospital building and construct new accommodation blocks,Unite Studentsreopened the site as a privately-operated hall forDurham Universitystudents under the name Rushford Court. In 2019–20, the university used the site as a temporary home for itsJohn Snow College,and in 2023 announced that it would be using it as a temporary home forHild Bede College,and afterwards founding a new college on the site.

History

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As a hospital

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An engraving of the hospital in 1866

The hospital, which was designed in the Elizabethan style and built at a cost of £7,500, opened in 1853, replacing a hospital onAllergate.[1][2]The building was on an 'H' plan, with decorated gables, chimneys and a central bell tower, and was set in an open field with a terrace to the front.[3]A convalescent wing financed by donations from Dean Waddington, and additional wards financed by John Eden, opened in 1867 and 1886 respectively.[1][3]

A freestanding building was added to the south of the hospital in 1914 to provide nursing accommodation, and an operating theatre on the east in 1919.[3]A major proposal to expand the hospital from 50 to 204 bed was made around 1920, but not implemented.[2]In 1938, a substantial extension called the Rushford Wing, designed by Cordingly and McIntyre, was added to the front of the building, hiding much of the original frontage.[3]The wing was named after Hannah Rushford, who would later be the city's first femalemayor.[4]

The hospital joined theNational Health Servicein 1948.[5]In 1971, a major reorganisation of Durham's hospitals madeDryburn Hospitalthe city's main hospital, while County Hospital became a dedicated psychiatric facility.[2]

After psychiatric services had transferred to theLanchester Road Hospital,the hospital closed in 2010.[6]

As a student residence

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In 2014 planning permission was sought to remove the 1930s additions, returning the main building back to its original state and adapting it to house 82 student studio flats, and to create additional new-build blocks to house another 281 student flats.[7][8]Planning was refused byDurham County Council,due to the effect of the new buildings on the city'sconservation areaand on local residents, but this decision was overturned and planning granted by thePlanning Inspectoratein March 2016.[8]

Construction work began on the new scheme in May 2017[9]and was completed in August 2018. The 363-bedroom complex was sold prior to completion toUnite Students,who operate it as Rushford Court.[10][11]

Use by Durham University

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During 2019–20, the site was used byDurham Universityto houseJohn Snow Collegewhile the college awaited completion of its new buildings on theMount Oswaldsite.[11]

In January 2023, Durham University announced plans to work with the owners to provide the full facilities of aDurham University collegeon the site,[12]accompanied by a planning proposal to construct an additional amenities building, set into existing terracing in front of the main historic building,[2]which was approved in April 2023.[13]The site will provide a temporary home forHild Bede Collegefrom summer 2024, while that college's Leazes Road site undergoes redevelopment, and is then expected to become a new college for the university.[12][14]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abKelly's Directory 1910
  2. ^abcdA Croft (12 October 2022)."Heritage Statement"(PDF).Chris Blandford Associates.
  3. ^abcd"Planning Services Committee Report"(PDF).Durham County Council.March 2014.
  4. ^Richardson, Michael (2019).Lost Durham.Amberley Publishing.ISBN978-1445691329.
  5. ^"Durham County Hospital, Durham".National archives.Retrieved26 September2018.
  6. ^Tallentire, Mark (30 May 2013)."Durham's County Hospital sold to property developers".The Northern Echo.Retrieved26 September2018.
  7. ^"Viaduct Court (County Hospital) Development".Stuome report.Retrieved26 September2018.
  8. ^abWright, Y (7 March 2016)."Appeal Decision"(PDF).The Planning Inspectorate.Retrieved11 February2023.
  9. ^"Work begins on transformation of former County Hospital into student accommodation".Sladden Estates. 3 May 2017. Archived fromthe originalon 27 September 2018.Retrieved26 September2018.
  10. ^"Rushford Court, Durham".Sladden Estates. Archived fromthe originalon 27 September 2018.Retrieved26 September2018.
  11. ^abConner-Hill, Rachel (17 December 2018)."Durham University announces plans to take over city centre accommodation".The Northern Echo.Retrieved9 July2019.
  12. ^ab"Future Development".College of St Hild and St Bede.Retrieved4 February2023.
  13. ^"New university developments secured for BAM and Unite Students".PBC Today.3 April 2023.
  14. ^Alice Martin (24 January 2023)."Rushford Court to become Durham's eighteenth college 'in the longer term'".The Tab.