The building that became St. Thomas' Hospital was originally a
workhouse known as the
Stockport Union Workhouse (though some records list the name as
Shaw Heath Workhouse). The building was designed by
Henry Bowman and opened on Christmas Day in 1841. It was intended to house 690 inmates. Between 1948 and 1949, the building was renamed to Shaw Heath Hospital. It became St. Thomas' Hospital in 1954. The building became
Grade II listed on 10 March 1975. Stockport Arts and Health, an organisation that was set up in 1993 to promote arts initiatives within the health service in Stockport, moved to a former ward at St. Thomas' Hospital in 1998. Later in 1999, the ward was converted and became the Stockport Centre for Arts and Health and operated as a workshop space and exhibition. The hospital was closed in 2004. Since its closure, St. Thomas' hospital has become a site of interest for urban explorers and paranormal investigators. British paranormal investigation show
Most Haunted recorded an episode exploring the hospital building in 2007. ==Redevelopment==