Aberdeenshire HER - NO69NE0029 - GLEN O'DEE HOSPITAL

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Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO69NE0029
NameGLEN O'DEE HOSPITAL
NRHE Card No.NO69NE34
NRHE Numlink 79832
HES SM No. NULL
HES LB No. 21871
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Incomplete
Details Remains of former Edwardian convalescence hospital, hotel, war billet, and fever hospital. It was the first sanatorium to be built in Scotland. This timber-built sanatorium opened on the 24th December 1900 as the 'Nordrach-on-Dee' private tuberculosis sanatorium. It is built in the Bavarian-style, and once housed the author Somerset Maugham as a patient. Designed 'for the purpose of carrying out the open-air treatment of consumption and other forms of tuberculosis and lung disease. This is the first establishment in Scotland specially designed and erected on a specially-selected locality for carrying out the Nordrach treatment. It has been erected at a cost of over £600 per bed. The grounds extend to about 25 acres, and the lengths of the walks are graded according to the strength of the patient. Shelters are erected here and there among the trees, some of them being on the revolving principle. A winter garden is to be provided in the verandah that connects the sanatorium with the dining-room. The sanatorium has accommodation for 40 patients. The building, which was designed by Mr. George Coutts, architect, Aberdeen, after a visit to Germany with Dr. Lawson, has cost about £21,000, including the purchase price of the site'. The hospital closed in 1928, then re-opened as the 'Glen O'Dee' luxury hotel in 1934. During the Second World War the hotel was requisitioned by the army in 1941 and used to billet troops. In 1945, the building was purchased by the Scottish Red Cross Society and refitted as a sanatorium for ex-servicemen and women suffering from TB. It was transferred in 1955 to the NHS, becoming a convalescent hospital. Glen O' Dee briefly returned to its role as a sanatorium during the Aberdeen typhoid epidemic in 1964. The nurses' home was demolished in 1988, and it went out of use as a typhoid hospital in 1990, becoming a care home for elderly patients. Wet rot became an issue, and in 1994 the last of the patients left. In 1998, a purpose-built hospital building was erected to the North of the original building, which remains vacant and in poor repair. Significantly damaged by fire on 14th October 2016.
Last Update03/02/2023
Updated Bybmann
CompilerCH
Date of Compilation08/10/2009

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National Grid Reference: NO 6851 9673



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Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
SANATORIUMSTIMBERREMAINS OFB100
HOTELS REMAINS OFC100
HOSPITALSCONVALESCENTREMAINS OFA100