It is located next to the large St Helier council estate and close to the major intersection known as Rosehill.
[3] Further damage was caused in later raids and the hospital was struck by two flying bombs in June 1944.
[11] The hospital has attracted some criticism because of the deteriorating physical condition of the buildings, some of which date from the 1940s.
Writing in The Observer newspaper, the chief medical officer of the trust, Dr Ruth Charlton, described the hospital as "dilapidated and unpleasant", with regular basement flooding and emergency ward closures.
[12] On 13 January 2025, the phlebotomy department closed due to flooding from a partial ceiling collapse.
The trust apologised for the inconvenience and assured that routine blood tests would resume the following day.