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New children’s mental health centre funded by Maudsley Charity highly commended in major European design award

London’s world-leading mental health centre for children and young people has been highly commended in a major European architectural award.

The Pears Maudsley Centre for Children and Young People is set to open in Denmark Hill in 2023. The Maudsley Charity has committed £10m in funding to help build this world-leading centre for care and research in south London, which will bring together leading clinicians and researchers with the aim of transforming the mental health of children and young people.

Architect Graham Harris and his team at IBI Group were highly commended in the future healthcare design category at the recently announced European Healthcare Awards for their work on the centre.

The building will house modern inpatient, outpatient and crisis mental health care facilities for children and young people, as well as state of the art clinical research facilities. It will bring together clinicians from the UK’s largest NHS provider of specialist child and adolescent mental health services to work with the largest group of mental health scientists and clinical academics in Europe.

Rebecca Gray, chief executive of the Maudsley Charity, said: “One in eight children or young people in the UK has a clinically diagnosable mental health disorder and half of adult mental health problems begin by the age of 15. Without early diagnosis and intervention, those problems can have a life-long impact on a young person’s life prospects by affecting their education, employment and relationships.

“We are delighted with this recognition for the building that, together with our generous donors, we have helped to fund. With our breaking ground ceremony taking place shortly this recognition provides a boost to everyone committed to the mental wellbeing of our children and young people and early and effective treatment.”

Clinicians from South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust (SLaM) and researchers from King’s College London’s Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience (IoPPN) will work alongside each other to develop new ways of addressing the mental health and wellbeing challenges facing children and young people today.

Dr Bruce Clark, SLaM’s clinical director for child and adolescent mental health services, welcomed the recognition of the quality of the centre’s design.

He said: “We are confident that the centre will provide world-leading clinical care and host exceptional research around the mental health of our children and young people. However, with our Trust serving four diverse south London boroughs, with significant levels of deprivation, we are determined that the centre will not just build on our international reputation for CAMHS innovation and treatment. The centre’s work will drive positive changes in the mental health problems affecting our communities – including those we serve most closely.

“It is gratifying to know this work will take place in an environment which will support us in that endeavour, and we congratulate Graham and his colleagues.”

Professor Emily Simonoff, Head of the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at King’s College London said: “The opportunities to accelerate research progress and clinical translation afforded by the co-location of researchers and clinicians in the Centre is enormous. The children, young people and families attending our services are keen to participate in research that will improve outcomes and the facilities in the new Centre will allow us to increase the volume of cutting-edge research. By developing research projects with our clinical colleagues and the children and young people we see in our services, we are confident we will be addressing the scientific questions most likely to produce meaningful benefits for children and young people.”

Mr Harris and his colleagues talked with current service users and parents and carers while designing the building to ensure they influenced the design of the new centre. That input and IBI’s own approach ensured that access to nature was built into the design.

Mr Harris said: “We are thrilled that our exemplary design for the Pears Maudsley Centre has been so comprehensively recognized. Thanks to highly committed partnership-working between the Trust, the Maudsley Charity, King’s College London and their expert design team, the Pears Maudsley Centre will make a major contribution to the treatment and recovery of young people suffering with mental health issues.  Every stakeholder involved in this complex project deserves a major round of applause.”

The building will have landscaped outdoor terraces with extensive planting on each of the building’s eight floors – capped by a roof terrace. It is hoped this will provide the calming, relaxing spaces difficult to achieve in a traditional inner-city hospital building.

 

ENDS
Media contact: Richard Morley at Maudsley Charity: richard.morley@maudsleycharity.org

The Maudsley Charity an independent NHS charity working with South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and theInstitute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London.  

The Maudsley Charity is here to promote positive change in the world of mental health. We support innovation, research and service improvement, and raise public awareness and understanding. We support patients and families, clinical care teams and scientists who are working towards the common goal of improving mental health.

Working closely with South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust, which provides the UK’s widest range of mental health services, and the world-renowned Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King’s College London, we help fund ground-breaking neurological and mental health research, service improvements and therapeutic programmes.