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TQEH Mental Health Rehabilitation Service

Shaping the Future of Mental Health Care

The Queen Elizabeth Hospital (TQEH) Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility is a 24-bed, purpose-built centre delivering recovery-focused care in a dignified, therapeutic environment. Featuring natural light, landscaped courtyards, and anti-ligature design, it promotes safety and wellbeing. The fully electric, energy-efficient facility enhances South Australia’s mental health capacity and sets a benchmark in collaborative, sustainable healthcare delivery.

Constructed by Hindmarsh Construction on behalf of Central Adelaide Local Health Network (CALHN) and supported by Department for Infrastructure and Transport (DIT) and SA Health, The Queen Elizabeth Hospital Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility marks a new chapter in how specialist mental health services are delivered in South Australia.

The project forms part of a broader state government initiative to increase mental health capacity and reduce pressure on emergency departments and acute wards. The Queen Elizabeth Hospital services a population of more than 250,000 residents across western Adelaide, and the addition of specialist rehabilitation beds helps to create better service flow across the region’s mental health system.

Designed to provide longer-term, recovery-focused care, the two-storey, 24-bed facility offers a calm, residential environment where patients can safely transition from acute care to greater independence. Single bedrooms with ensuites, communal living areas, therapy rooms, and landscaped courtyards have been carefully arranged to encourage connection, dignity, and healing.

Delivering mental health infrastructure of this nature demanded a nuanced and collaborative approach. Hindmarsh worked closely with CALHN clinical teams, specialist consultants, governance stakeholders, and consumer representatives — including the Office of the Chief Psychiatrist, Infection Control, and union representatives — to ensure the spaces supported both therapeutic goals and stringent clinical requirements.

Anti-ligature fixtures, passive observation lines, and acoustic controls were carefully integrated, while periodic inspections, sample submissions, and staged sign-offs ensured every built element met clinical, operational, and functional standards.

To refine the design, a prototype bedroom was constructed early in the process, enabling clinical teams to test layouts, materials, and safety features under real-world conditions. Insights gained directly informed the final fit-out demonstrating a practical and collaborative approach to stakeholder engagement and user-led design.

Specialist furniture, fixtures, and clinical equipment was sourced internationally. Key imported elements included Britplas anti-ligature bedroom window systems from the United Kingdom, Hipac specialist door hardware from the UK, Qinera sensory modulation equipment from Spain, and oversized Otis lift components from multiple international manufacturing centres.

Local suppliers produced essential custom components such as Crown Furniture beds and side tables, and entirely new ensuite door systems designed specifically for this project. Co-ordinating procurement, freight, customs clearance, installation sequencing, and commissioning for all of these items required detailed forward planning, risk management and close communication between Hindmarsh, suppliers, and CALHN stakeholders.

Given the complexity of mental health care, the architectural and interior planning elements of the project carry significant weight. Circulation pathways, sight-lines, acoustic control, privacy, and access to outdoor space were all carefully balanced to promote calmness and connection rather than confinement, with two secure courtyards providing patient-controlled access to outdoor recreation. Sustainability, durability, and lifecycle considerations were integrated throughout, with finishes selected for longevity in high-use environments while maintaining a contemporary, warm, and human-scaled atmosphere consistent with current therapeutic design philosophies.

Although the facility sits across the road from the main TQEH campus, it needed to integrate fully into the hospital’s existing operational and digital networks, introducing significant technical complexity to the construction programme. Services integration included linking fibre networks, security, access control, CCTV, clinical communications and mobile duress systems into CALHN’s broader digital and emergency response platforms.

The mechanical services and fire systems were configured so that each wing can shut down independently during an incident while the rest of the facility remains operational, demonstrating a high level of controlled systems integration. Backup generator and UPS systems were tied into the site-wide power resilience framework, further supporting continuity of care.

As mental health service models continue to evolve nationally, infrastructure is increasingly being shaped around recovery-oriented practice rather than solely crisis intervention. The new facility at The Queen Elizabeth Hospital reflects that shift: providing time, space, and specialist support for people to rebuild capacity and confidence before returning to the community.

For Hindmarsh, the project underscores its role as a national contractor capable of delivering technically complex social infrastructure that directly contributes to community wellbeing. It is an example of thoughtful construction shaping not only the built environment, but also the quality of care that environment enables.

For more information contact Hindmarsh Construction, phone 08 8228 4188, email enquiries@hindmarsh.com.au, website hindmarsh.com.au

TQEH Mental Health Rehabilitation Facility PDF Preview. Click to download PDF.

Factbox

Client: Central Adelaide Local Health Network (CALHN) supported by Department for Infrastructure and Transport (DIT) and SA Health

Main Construction Company: Hindmarsh Construction

Architect: Cheesman Architects

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