Greenlane Clinical Centre is a public hospital in Greenlane, Auckland, located on Green Lane West, near Cornwall Park. The hospital is administered by the Northern division of Te Whatu Ora providing outpatient and day surgery services to the Auckland Region. The healthcare facilities at Greenlane have seen many notable developments in New Zealand's healthcare.
The centre was founded as the Costley Home for the Aged Poor in 1890, built with funds bequeathed by Edward Costley. Run by the Auckland Charitable Aid Trust, it had an occupancy of about 175 patients.[1] An Infirmary Ward for the Incurables, now known as building 5, was opened by Minister for Health George Fowlds in 1907.[2] The site was renamed Auckland Infirmary in 1924.[3]
In 2007 Auckland District Health Board applied for resource consent to demolish building 5, making way for more parking and a new building. Heritage groups opposed the proposal, with the Environment Court finding in their favour. Building 5 was granted category one status by Heritage New Zealand in 2010.[4][5][3]
In 1942 the site became a general hospital with the completion of a Main Building in 1943.[6][3][7] Greenlane became internationally renowned for heart surgery under Sir Douglas Robb and Sir Brian Barratt-Boyes, seeing the first open heart operation in the country in 1958, and the second heart valve replacement in the world in 1962.[6][8]
Greenlane Clinical Centre
All inpatient services were moved to the Auckland City Hospital in 2003 and Green Lane Hospital became the Greenlane Clinical Centre treating outpatients and day surgery cases.[9][10]
Facilities
In May 2023, the services provided by Te Whatu Ora at Green Lane Clinical Centre were focused on community, ambulatory & mental health services. These services included:
^Hutchinson, BR (1990). Green Lane Hospital The First Hundred Years. Greenlane Hospital Centennial Committee Printed by Albion Press Ltd. OCLC154625094.