Knockbracken Healthcare Park Explained

Knockbracken Healthcare Park
Org/Group:Belfast Health and Social Care Trust
Location:Saintfield Road, Belfast
Country:Northern Ireland
Healthcare:Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland
Type:Specialist
Speciality:Mental health
Founded:1829
Website:https://belfasttrust.hscni.net/hospitals/knockbracken/
Map Type:Northern Ireland

The Knockbracken Healthcare Park is a mental health facility based on the Saintfield Road, Belfast, Northern Ireland. It is managed by the Belfast Health and Social Care Trust.

History

The facility was commissioned to replace the old Belfast Asylum on Grosvenor Road.[1] It was decided to acquire Purdysburn House, an early 19th century house designed by Thomas Hopper for Narcissus Batt, a banker, and its extensive grounds.[2] The new mental health facilities, known as Purdysburn Villa Colony, were designed by George Thomas Hine and Tulloch andFitzsimmons with the first four new villas being built on the eastern part of the site in 1906 and a further six villas, together with recreation hall, administration block and churches, being built in a similar location in 1913.[3] It joined the National Health Service as Purdysburn Hospital in 1948 and subsequently evolved to become Knockbracken Healthcare Park.[4]

Purdysburn House itself, which had been built on the western part of the site, was demolished in 1965 and HM Prison Hydebank Wood was built in that location in 1979.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Obituary Dr. Walter Fowler. British Medical Journal . 674. 17 November 1917. 10.1136/bmj.2.2968.674-e. 220164257. free.
  2. Web site: An Early Eighteenth Century Garden Bosquet at Purdysburn, County Down. Terence. Reeves-Smyth . Philip . Smith. Northern Ireland Heritage Gardens Trust . 2015. 28 March 2020.
  3. Book: Urban Spaces in Nineteenth-Century Ireland. Georgina . Laragy. Olwen . Purdue. Jonathan Jeffrey . Wright. Liverpool University Press. 2018. 978-1786941527. 131.
  4. Web site: Knockbracken Mental Health Services, Belfast. National Archives. 28 March 2020.
  5. Reeves-Smyth and Smith, p. 13