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It is a retrofitted building that has retained the main superstructure of its predecessor, Blanco Court. Patient accommodation at the hospital includes suites, private rooms, double rooms and cost-saving four-bedroom and six-bedroom facility. [3] On December 13, 2008, Raffles Hospital was accredited by the Joint Commission International. [4]
They eventually settled on Blanco Court, [11] a commercial building at the intersection of North Bridge Road and Ophir Road. [6] [9] Construction works to convert it into a hospital began in 1999. This culminated in the opening of the 380-bed Raffles Hospital on 31 March 2001. [6]
Mount Elizabeth Hospital: 1979 Orchard: 345 [13] Mount Elizabeth Novena Hospital: 2012 Novena: 333 [14] Parkway East Hospital: 1942 Joo Chiat: 143 [15] Raffles Hospital: 2002 Bugis: Private (Raffles Medical Group) 380 [16] Thomson Medical Centre: 1979 Thomson: Private (Thomson Medical Group) 187 [17]
Raffles Medical Group (RMG) is one of the largest private healthcare providers in Asia, with hospitals and clinics located in several cities, including Singapore. [43] RMG owns Raffles Hospital in Singapore, which specializes in obstetrics and gynecology, cardiology, oncology, and orthopedics. [43]
In 2005, Colony Capital bought Raffles Holdings for $1 billion from the Singapore government. Raffles and Swissôtel joined Fairmont Hotels in the newly formed holding, FRHI Hotels & Resorts, in 2006. [8] In December 2015, Accor announced the acquisition of FRHI Hotels & Resorts, taking over the Fairmont, Raffles, and Swissotel hotel chains. [9]
The 180,000-square-foot building features 120 private rooms for patients, each with their own bathroom. Officials said that in addition to the rooms, the building as a whole is designed for ...
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An X marks the location of a brick office building on West Garfield Street that St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in O’Fallon is donating to the Catholic Diocese of Belleville in downtown Belleville.