Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Construction begins on new St. Paul's Hospital

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2021 07:33 PM
  • Construction begins on new St. Paul's Hospital

Construction has kicked off for the new St. Paul's Hospital at the Jim Pattison Medical Centre, which the province says is the largest hospital redevelopment project in British Columbia's history.

Health Minister Adrian Dix says it's a "great day," as the new site will be a full-service acute care hospital and integrated health-care campus with a capacity for 548 beds.

Dix told a news conference Monday that the hospital will continue to be the home of leading provincial programs and referral centres, including heart and lung care, specialty services and transplants.

He says the hospital will also offer HIV/AIDS care, chronic disease management, emergency and critical care, mental health and addictions programs, Indigenous health services, maternity services and community outreach programs.

The hospital will continue to be a teaching site where University of British Columbia medical students and British Columbia Institute of Technology nursing students receive their training.

Dix says the new St. Paul's Hospital on Station Street in the False Creek Flats area is expected to be complete in 2027 and will replace the current site in downtown Vancouver.

The new hospital is expected to cost $2.174 billion, of which B.C. is contributing $1.327 billion. The St. Paul's Foundation plans to raise $125 million and Providence Health Care will fund the rest from the sale of the current St. Paul's property.

The province says PCL Construction will build the new hospital and the project will create 8,523 direct jobs and 5,383 indirect jobs, such as construction material manufacturing and food services.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada boosts COVID-19 foreign aid by $485M

Canada boosts COVID-19 foreign aid by $485M
The new funds are going towards the Access to COVID-19 Tools, or "ACT" Accelerator, which was created in April by the World Health Organization, the French government, the European Commission and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

Canada boosts COVID-19 foreign aid by $485M

What we know about the first COVID vaccine doses

What we know about the first COVID vaccine doses
Canada is set to receive 249,000 doses of the drug from the U.S. pharmaceutical giant and its German partner BioNTech by the end of the month and four million total doses — enough to vaccinate two million people — by March.

What we know about the first COVID vaccine doses

2020 worst year for refugee resettlement: UN

2020 worst year for refugee resettlement: UN
With nearly 168 countries implementing border and travel restrictions, millions of displaced people around the globe were stuck, unable to either return to their home countries or move to others.

2020 worst year for refugee resettlement: UN

CSIS data use may have broken law: watchdog

CSIS data use may have broken law: watchdog
The National Security and Intelligence Review Agency's report found CSIS lacked the policies or procedures to ensure it sought legal advice to avoid unlawful use of the data.

CSIS data use may have broken law: watchdog

Vancouver Police looking for man for alleged stabbing

Vancouver Police looking for man for alleged stabbing
Chartrand allegedly stabbed two people inside their home near Joyce Street and Boundary Road on November 3, 2019.

Vancouver Police looking for man for alleged stabbing

Oil bubbling up from decades-old shipwreck in B.C.

Oil bubbling up from decades-old shipwreck in B.C.
The Canadian Coast Guard says a fuel-like sheen was investigated in September and was thought to be bilge discharge from a ship, but the problem continued and a deeper look uncovered the historic wreckage.

Oil bubbling up from decades-old shipwreck in B.C.