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Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

1882 establishments in AustraliaBuildings and structures awarded the Sir John Sulman MedalCamperdown, New South WalesGeorge Allen Mansfield buildingsHospitals established in 1882
Hospitals in SydneyOrganisations based in Australia with royal patronageSydney Medical SchoolTeaching hospitals in Australia
Camperdown Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 3
Camperdown Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 3

The Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (abbreviated RPAH or RPA) is large of teaching hospital in Sydney, Australia, located on Missenden Road in Camperdown. It is a teaching hospital of the Central Clinical School of the Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney and is situated in proximity to the Blackburn Building of the university's main campus. RPAH is the largest hospital in the Sydney Local Health District, with approximately 700 beds (circa 2005). Following a $350 million redevelopment, the perinatal hospital King George V Memorial Hospital has been incorporated into it.An Australian television documentary, RPA, was filmed there from 1995 to 2012, depicting the everyday workings of a major metropolitan hospital. RPA is ranked 3rd on Newsweek's 2021 ranking of Australia's best hospitals.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Royal Prince Alfred Hospital
Gloucester House Drive, Sydney Camperdown

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N -33.88917 ° E 151.18288 °
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Royal Prince Alfred Hospital

Gloucester House Drive 57-59
2050 Sydney, Camperdown
New South Wales, Australia
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slhd.nsw.gov.au

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Camperdown Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 3
Camperdown Royal Prince Alfred Hospital 3
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St Andrew's College, University of Sydney

St Andrew's College is a residential college for women and men within the University of Sydney, in the suburb of Newtown. Home to over 380 male and female undergraduate students, postgraduate students, resident Fellows and graduate residents. The College, governed by its own elected Council, is situated within the campus of the University of Sydney. Set in its own picturesque grounds, it has offered residency, academic and social support to students for 150 years. The College provides students with a combination of intellectual independence, academic support from the Residential Life team and personal development through involvement in Students’ Club activities such as a wide range of sporting, philanthropic and cultural activities and the gift of lifelong friendships. The St Andrew's College Incorporation Act received Royal Assent in 1867 in the 31st year of the reign of Queen Victoria and was only replaced by an updated Act as recently as 1998. 1867 is therefore the date taken as the College's foundation, and in 2017 the College celebrated its sesquicentenary as Australia's third oldest university college. In 1870 the College Council first met and in 1876 the students entered the grand sandstone Scottish baronial building now known as the Main Building. The College is a non-denominational independent institution of Protestant origins situated upon its own sub-grant of Crown Land and governed by a Council under the St Andrew's College Act 1998. Diversity of faith is genuinely welcome. The College is one of Australia's most prestigious and selective university colleges, producing many notable alumni in the fields of business, law and politics. Known as Androvians, alumni have taken on leading positions in both public and private sectors of Australia. Examples include but are not limited to: H. V. Bert (Doc) Evatt (President of the United Nations), Andrew Constance (Politician), Angus Taylor (Politician), Craig Blair (Founder, AirTree Ventures), James and Robbie Ferguson (Founder, Immutable X), John Bradfield (Architect of Sydney Harbour Bridge), Rohan Browning (Athlete) and more.