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A Plan for the Infirmary: A Winter Garden

Julian and Harriet Smart, 28th September 2025

Also available as a PDF

The Infirmary Winter Garden: A new vision for the Berwick Infirmary

The new Community Hospital at Berwick-upon-Tweed has built on the legacy of the old Infirmary, and in 2020 Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust vowed to keep the much loved tower and associated front block. The retention of this block has been carefully and thoughtfully incorporated into the design for the new hospital, and enhanced by extensive landscaping that the Design and Access statement considers essential for successful modern health care settings.

Now in 2025, the Trust has announced that it has failed to find a satisfactory commercial tenant or alternative use for the renovated Infirmary front. It states that renovation and future maintenance of the building is “very expensive.” We would like to encourage the Trust to publish the various reports they have made, and also to state clearly its own costs, initial and ongoing for the demolition of the building and the retention of the tower as a single element which it now proposes. Note that this was something that it was never designed to do, either structurally or as part of the architectural composition of the building.

We acknowledge that any proposal comes at a cost – upfront, and upkeep. But we feel that this proposal has a good chance of finding funding both nationally and locally, with significant community input.

Knole House orangery: an oasis of calm

Vision

Imagine stepping into a luminous sanctuary where history meets nature: the old Berwick Infirmary reborn as a stunning Winter Garden. By retaining the building’s core structure as outlined in the planning application, we will create a flowing stone atrium bathed in natural light, a place of renewal that honours its 1874 legacy while inspiring joy, healing, and community connection. This uplifting space will complement the new hospital, preserve Berwick’s heritage skyline, and provide a calm and welcoming environment for generations of staff, patients and visitors.

An exemplar of this is the Knole House orangery, illustrated above.

Key Features

Benefits

Funding Sources

To bring this vision to life, a diverse array of funding streams can be tapped, making the project accessible and resilient:

Given heritage funding is likely to be available for retaining and reusing the front, but not for retaining only the tower, added to the extra planning and consultancy costs, the result is that Northumbria Healthcare is likely to spend more public money on the upfront costs of their latest plan than the scheme for which they already have permission.

Path Forward

With passion, partnerships, and proven funding pathways, this Winter Garden will bloom into a symbol of Berwick’s resilient spirit. Let’s unite heritage lovers, environmentalists, and community champions to transform the Infirmary into an inspiring oasis – creating joy, fostering connections, and leaving a legacy of beauty and well-being for all.

Granby winter gardens: a transformation of two derelict houses