Aarhus Municipal Hospital was established on 7 November 1893 as an independent hospital in buildings designed by the architect
Thomas Arboe. The hospital had 140 beds, one
attending physician and two
residents. In 1913, the department of
epidemiology moved to
Marselisborg Hospital and the medicinal department moved into the former epidemiological building while the surgical unit stayed in the main building. In 1918, the department of medicine moved to a new building and a department of
tuberculosis was established. In 1931,
C.F. Møller and
Kay Fisker won an architectural contest for the design of an expansion of the hospital. The first new buildings were completed in 1935 in a
functionalist style. The hospital has been expanded several times since then, including in 1980 and in 2008. On 1 January 2004, Aarhus Municipal Hospital merged administratively with
Aarhus County Hospital,
Marselisborg Hospital and
Samsø Sygehus under the name Aarhus Sygehus. On April 1, 2007, Aarhus Sygehus merged with
Skejby Sygehus to form
Aarhus University Hospital. Aarhus University Hospital built a new large single hospital in
Skejby, in the northern parts of town, from 2012 to 2018, and all former hospital departments are to be merged and relocated here. In February 2019, the last hospital departments at Aarhus Municipal Hospital were relocated to The New University Hospital (DNU). In 2016,
Aarhus University bought the hospital grounds and buildings of the Municipal Hospital, and the area is scheduled for redevelopment as an extension of the central University Campus. The area will be known as "
Universitetsbyen" (The University Town) in the future. == Buildings ==