Willen Hospice Ground Breaking
A turf cutting ceremony has marked the start of an extension and refurbishment project that will help Willen Hospice meet the needs of patients and their families, both now and in the future.
The socially distanced ground-breaking ceremony was carried out by Lead Nurse Anita Connolly who was accompanied by Chair of Trustees, Paul Davis, the Mayor of Milton Keynes, Cllr Mohammed Khan, High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire, George Anson, Her Majesty’s Lord-Lieutenant of Buckinghamshire, Countess Howe, Managing Director of SDC, Francis Shiner, and SDC’s Contracts Manager for the project, David Fairley.
The project comprises a two-storey extension to the South of the site, along with a smaller extension to the West. The internal spaces will be reconfigured and refurbished to provide patient rooms, and a new kitchen and café area.
The exciting new chapter for the Hospice has been made possible thanks to the generous legacy donations of Hospice supporters, who determined their gifts should be used to improve the Hospice for future generations. Additional funding for the £4M project has been donated by trusts and foundations, including local funders MK Community Foundation and the Jim Marshall Charitable Trust, who support the Hospice’s work.
Chief Executive of the Hospice, Peta Wilkinson, said: ‘This is a really exciting time for Willen Hospice, and for Milton Keynes as a whole. The legacy gifts we have been left are enabling us to invest in our local community and provide something that will benefit local people for years to come. The extension will create flexible spaces that we can use in a range of ways to suit our patients’ needs, and those of their families. It will allow us to care for a wider range of illnesses, and give us the opportunity to care for our patients much earlier in their palliative journey, rather than at the very end. We’re so proud to be part of the local community. This project will help us to continue to play an important role in the lives of so many more who will need our care so they can spend the end of their lives in a rich and meaningful way.’
Building is expected to take approximately a year with the new facilities opening in spring 2022.