The committee selected a site on Southernhay, near the city centre, and the foundation stone was laid by Clarke only 35 days after the initial meeting of the committee, with a party of soldiers firing three volleys of small arms to mark the occasion.[5] Local architect John Richards provided his services for free, and designed a large brick building with a "architecturally domestic" style, a wing on either side, and a minimum of detail.[5] The building was completed and the hospital admitted its first patients in 1743.[4] By 1748, the hospital had one hundred beds.[5]
The new 'Halford wing' was started in 1856,[6] from the bequests of Mrs Halford,[7] and this was used from 1858 to alleviate overcrowding in the hospital.[8] A gothic-style chapel[5] was added to the hospital, opening on 31 August 1869, built with a gift from Mr Arthur Kempe,[9] one of the honorary surgeons of the hospital.[10]
In 1896-7, the 'Victoria wing' was built parallel to the Halford wing, and named for Queen Victoria in recognition of her long reign.[11] It was later to have sun balconies added in 1933.[5] In 1899, the Duke of York, and his wife visited the hospital and granted it permission to use the "Royal" title.[4][12]
Despite the city being regularly subjected to air raids during the Second World War, the hospital escaped damage.[4] In 1920, the Victory wing was added, bringing the total bed space to over 300.[13]
In 1974, having outgrown the Southernhay site, the hospital moved out of the city centre, into a new hospital built in the grounds of the Wonford House Hospital,[4] formerly an asylum, set in 20 acres of grounds.[14]
The hospital moved to a new tower-block building on the Wonford site in July 1974. The move involved a fleet of ambulances shuttling patients from the Southernhay site to the new building over the course of over a week. The casualty and accident surgical wards were the last to move.[15] The move was over eight weeks behind schedule, due to delays in delivery of vital equipment because of the Three-Day Week imposed by the government due to industrial action by coal miners.[15] There were 14 wards in the new hospital, as well as 12 operating theatres.[15]
Initially, there were complaints from night staff about the noise of gunfire from the nearby Wyvern Barracks, where the army shooting range was located.[16] Two people died falling from height at the hospital within a year of it opening, the first being a workman on the outside of the building, and the second a nine-year old patient, who fell down a service shaft.[17]
In 1985, the building was the first major structure in the UK found to have concrete cancer (the alkali–silica reaction), which caused the concrete to expand and fail. It is thought that condensation from the kitchens was the primary cause.[4]
Second Wonford hospital
The replacement buildings were built over several phases with the first phase being completed in 1992. This first phase, also included an ophthalmic unit which replaced the West of England Eye Infirmary,[4] which was previously on its own site on Magdalen Street in the city centre.[4]