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    Morgan Sindall £26m diagnostic centre: retrofit and carbon design notes for engineers

    June 29, 2026|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Morgan Sindall £26m diagnostic centre: retrofit and carbon design notes for engineers

    First reported on The Construction Index

    30 Second Briefing

    Morgan Sindall Construction has completed a £26m Community Diagnostic Centre at St Margaret’s Hospital in Epping, refurbishing and extending an existing bungalow to house MRI, X-ray, non-obstetric ultrasound and outpatient services under the ProCure 23 framework for The Princess Alexandra Hospital NHS Trust. A further £6m extension, due by early 2027, will add a fibroscanner for liver assessment, extra ultrasound and X-ray capacity, and space for trans-nasal endoscopy. CarboniCa digital carbon analysis guided design and construction choices, with retrofit over new-build cutting embodied materials use and associated emissions.

    Technical Brief

    • Refurbishment centred on adapting an existing single-storey bungalow structure rather than demolishing and rebuilding.
    • Works form one of three concurrent workstreams Morgan Sindall is delivering for PAHT on the site.
    • CarboniCa digital carbon analysis was run iteratively through design and construction to steer low‑carbon material choices.
    • Retrofit strategy avoided new-build foundations and superstructure, cutting materials demand, waste arisings and transport movements.
    • Extension works already under way are costed at £6m, with completion targeted for early 2027.
    • Approach provides a live case of P23‑procured, carbon‑optimised retrofit for NHS diagnostic capacity expansion.

    Our Take

    Morgan Sindall Construction’s work on the Community Diagnostic Centre in Essex sits alongside recent education and defence builds in our database (such as the £32m Rushcliffe Spencer Academy expansion and new Royal Engineers facilities at Catterick), signalling a deliberate push into complex public-sector estates where decanting and live-environment working are critical skills.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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