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21 Oct 2025

New hospital staff accommodation block proposed

It will replace 50 year old buildings

New hospital staff accommodation block proposed

Artist's impression of new NDDH residences. Image courtesy: Grainge Architects

Staff accommodation at North Devon District Hospital (NDDH), which has been in use for 50 years, is set to be demolished and replaced with a modern building. This project marks the first phase of upgrades at the Barnstaple hospital and is seen as crucial for improving recruitment and staff retention.

The Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust wants to replace Munro House and Chichester House on Raleigh Road with one four-storey, flat-roofed building.

ABOVE: The existing staff accommodation at NDDH. Image courtesy: Alison Stephenson, Radio Exe

It will contain 112 ensuite bedrooms arranged in six to eight-bed cluster flats and four two-bed units for families.

The scheme includes wheelchair accessible units. A separate bike and surf board store is proposed as well as a bin/ recycling store and laundry.

The building will be on the same footprint as the existing building, set in a parkland-type setting, says the trust, with landscaping providing the opportunity for biodiversity net gain through new, native trees and wildflower meadows.

There will be recreational spaces and quiet study areas. Staff are generally housed for periods of up to three months.

BAM Construction was appointed in May to build the staff accommodation part of the hospital revamp.

The Trust invited residents of the adjoining properties on Robourgh Road to a consultation event in July.

Bedrooms will face away from the neighbouring buildings and main internal living spaces of kitchen, living and dining rooms and amenity areas are away from the neighbouring boundary to avoid overlooking.

All site traffic should use a specifically constructed access road by the main hospital entrance, subject to planning and highways approval.

Funding for the work the hospital promised by the previous Conservative government under the New Hospitals Programme in 2019 is currently under review.

The total project has been estimated to cost £600 million and includes building new intensive care facilities and operating theatres. The clinical care building will be in the second phase of the work.

Speaking in parliament this week, North Devon Ian Roome MP claimed if ths hospital, the most remote in mainland England, does not get the funding now, critical and acute services will be at “serious risk of service failure” and there is no other hospital provision for 40 miles.

He said the previous Conservative government had not delivered on its promise to get spades in the ground by last February.

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