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The hospital was extended and the current façade of red brick and terracotta tiles was added, based on the designs of Albert Edward Murray, in 1893. [4] It was renamed the Royal City of Dublin Hospital following a visit by Princess Alexandra in 1900. [5] After services were transferred to St. James's Hospital, the hospital closed in 1986.
Bandon Community Hospital, Bandon Bantry General Hospital, Bantry; Bon Secours Hospital, Cork; Mater Private Hospital, Cork; Cork University Hospital, Cork; Cork University Maternity Hospital, Cork
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In 1998, Holles Street set up the Domino (Domiciliary Care In and Out of Hospital) and Home birth scheme through its team of community midwives. [8] The National Maternity Hospital Foundation, a charity which raises funds for a number of projects in the hospital with special emphasis on the neonatal intensive care unit, was established in 2012. [9]
The hospital, which is a teaching hospital for the University College Dublin, has 997 beds, [8] along with 206 Day Beds and 15 Operating Theatres. [9] It contains a negative-pressure ventilation ward which houses the National Bio-Terrorism Unit, [10] and is the National Centre in Ireland for various services. [11]
A new radiation therapy unit for cancer treatment was established at the hospital in 2012. [7] The St James's campus was chosen in 2012 as the site for the National Paediatric Hospital, allowing colocation with the adult hospital, and potentially "trilocation" with a future maternity hospital on the same site. [8]
Dr Steevens' Hospital (also called Dr Steevens's Hospital) (Irish: Ospidéal an Dr Steevens), one of Ireland's most distinguished eighteenth-century medical establishments, was located at Kilmainham in Dublin Ireland. It was founded under the terms of the will of Richard Steevens, an eminent physician in Dublin.