[1] Hospital wards were housed in a series of 2-storey pavilions built in terraces and connected by roofed walkways.
[1][4][5] In 1930, with the dissolution of the MAB, the hospital came under London County Council control, providing 552 beds dealing with scarlet fever and measles.
During the 1950s, it also contained a training school for nurses for the Hospital for Sick Children in Great Ormond Street.
An Accident and Emergency Department opened in the 1960s, built at the north of the site (it was to this unit that murdered Stephen Lawrence was taken and pronounced dead in April 1993).
The hospital's distinctive water tower remains a landmark, while the entrance lodge, administration block and steward's house have also been preserved.