1
Converted clock tower
The Lodge Moor Hospital buildings have been demolished to make way for a residential estate known as Redmires Close and all that remains from the past is this tower which would appear to have been converted into flats.
Image: © Roger Temple
Taken: 27 Jan 2007
0.10 miles
2
Edward VII Postbox
Outside the entrance to the former Lodge Moor Hospital (now a housing estate)
Image: © Keith Pitchforth
Taken: 5 Apr 2020
0.10 miles
3
Great oaks from little acorns grow
Stainless steel sculpture at the entrance to an upmarket housing estate on the former Lodge Moor hospital site.
Image: © Steve Fareham
Taken: 13 Mar 2008
0.11 miles
4
Lodge Moor and Beyond
The western outskirts of Sheffield viewed from Ringinglow.
Image: © Neil Theasby
Taken: 24 Nov 2014
0.12 miles
5
Lodge Moor Hospital Tower
Lodge Moor Hospital was built in the 1880's and for over a hundred years it served the people of Sheffield - sometimes known as "The Fever Hospital". Its construction on the edge of the city close to windy moors reflects a Victorian belief that fresh air was helpful for recuperation from illness. The hospital site is now home to a large private housing estate.
Image: © Neil Theasby
Taken: 20 Oct 2010
0.13 miles
6
Sheffield - S10 (Lodge Moor)
The water tower of the former Lodge Moor Hospital as seen from near the former main entrance. (Most former employers tended to refer to the tower as “The Clock Tower” because of its clocks, although its primary function was to store water for the hospital). The tower itself was not built until 1905. The whole site is now an up-market housing estate and is still (!) situated at an altitude of 280 metres (919 ft) above sea level. In addition, the tower - that now houses several apartments - is approximately 25 metres (75 ft) taller, making it visible from up to 4-5 miles away.
The hospital was established in response to the smallpox epidemic in Sheffield (1887-88) and was soon developed to treat other infectious diseases too. Eventually medical, surgical and spinal injuries patients were also cared for here and the Sheffield School of Nursing also had an education centre on site.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 4 Jun 2012
0.14 miles
7
Sheffield - S10 (Lodge Moor)
The view out of the main gates and entrance of the former Lodge Moor Hospital (now pedestrianised) onto Redmires Road. How many people must have passed through these gates during the hospital's life as a smallpox isolation hospital, then as a traditional infectious diseases hospital and finally when it was a general hospital and Regional Spinal Injuries Unit? Hundreds of thousands perhaps if one includes patients, visitors and staff. This site sits at an altitude of 280 metres (919 ft) above sea level and as such is one of the first locations in Sheffield to suffer the effects of snow falls.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 4 Jun 2012
0.14 miles
8
Sheffield - S10 (Lodge Moor)
The main gates and entrance of the former Lodge Moor Hospital. The building on the right was formerly an Nurse Education Centre and is now a private nursery. Originally an isolation hospital, it was built here away from civilisation and in a wall-to-wall fresh air situation. It was later developed into a facility that also cared for patients with a much wider range of conditions and in its later life it boasted a Regional Spinal Injuries Unit. Whilst preservation orders have been used to protect some of the original buildings, including the water tower visible here, the overall site has now been developed into an up-market housing estate.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 4 Jun 2012
0.15 miles
9
Pillar box
Edward VII Royal Mail Cast Iron Pillar Box
Image: © Nick Morris
Taken: 11 Mar 2015
0.15 miles
10
Sheffield - S10 (Lodge Moor)
The main gates and entrance to the former Lodge Moor Hospital. The building on the right (formerly a Nurse Education Centre and now a private nursery) is the last building on the left-hand side of this road that leads to the nearby Redmires Reservoir and then on to the moors. It was this isolated location that led to the hospital being built here. Originally built as an Isolation facility for smallpox cases, it was later developed into a hospital caring for patients with a wider range of conditions. Also, in its later life it boasted a Regional Spinal Injuries Unit. Whilst preservation orders have been used to protect some of the original buildings, the site overall has now been developed into an up-market housing estate.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 4 Jun 2012
0.16 miles