1965: Construction and Opening The four-level, 80-bed facility opened under the name Holy Cross Hospital in 1965, administered by the RC
Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart. Construction and equipment cost A£750,000 (A$1.5m), the building designed by Buchan, Laird & Buchan (now the Buchan Group – a multinational architecture firm which originated in Geelong). The original configuration featured medical, surgical, obstetric and paediatric departments.
1974 In 1974, due to financial and administrative difficulties faced by the MSC order, the hospital was to be sold. The local RC church acted to keep it by inviting another order, the Sisters of St John of God to take over its administration. The name of the hospital was not changed at this time, remaining as Holy Cross.
1977 The Sisters of St John of God purchased the hospital from the Missionary Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart (MSC Sisters) in 1977.
1980 The name of the hospital was officially changed from the Holy Cross Hospital to St John of God Geelong Hospital in 1980. The Missionary Sisters of the Most Sacred Heart partnered with the Hospital Auxiliary to build a new 81-bed hospital.
1989 The Sisters handed over the management of the hospital to lay caregivers in 1989.
Further developments • In 1988, plans to increase bed capacity and services was realised with the completion of the east wing which added four new operating theatres and three levels of patient accommodation. • A west wing was added in 1997, along with 60 additional beds, upgrades to maternity facilities and new medical consulting suites. • The Specialist Centre on Myer Street was completed in 2009, adding day surgery services and specialist consulting suites. • The development of the six storey Granada Medical Centre, an emergency department, three new operating theatres and a hydrotherapy centre, was completed in 2014. • In 2017 a new eight bed intensive care unit was opened the cardiac care unit will be expanded and upgraded. ==See also==