Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust creates smart estate with digital twin
Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust (MFT) has gone live with a digital twin of six hospitals as part of its strategy to create a smart estate. The trust worked with Esri UK and BIS Consult to develop the twin.

Replacing disparate systems and paper-based processes, the digital twin visualises floors, rooms and spaces with associated data and is already being used to understand space optimisation and support the management of RAAC and asbestos. Future plans include adding indoor navigation, patient contact tracing and real-time asset tracking.
The twin, which went live last month, was created on Esri UK’s GIS platform, which includes indoor mapping, spatial analysis, navigation and asset tracking. BIS Consult, MFT’s strategic data partner, led the development of the underlying data strategy and the integration of the multiple information sources required.
The twin encompasses Manchester Royal Infirmary, Royal Manchester Children’s Hospital, Manchester Royal Eye Hospital and Saint Mary’s Hospital on the Oxford Road campus, plus Altrincham Hospital and Withington Community Hospital. That amounts to 274,000 sq m of internal floor space.
The project overcame a major data integration challenge, which involved combining the trust’s data from multiple systems, including CAFM and CAD floor plans, and improving the overall quality of data. It also established new data governance so that information connected to the 3D model was accurate and up to date.
The project was led by David Bailey, head of digital estates at MFT. He said: “Integrating all of our existing data into one 3D model has created the foundation for building a digital twin and is driving new opportunities for efficiency gains. Moving from analogue to digital achieves a better understanding of our buildings and assets, which helps improve their management and maintenance, as well as improving patient safety.”
The digital twin is being used in a trial to better understand the use of space, by quickly showing where room usage is not being optimised. Full rollout will provide all staff with a real-time view of occupancy levels and space requests, while clinicians will be able to examine existing facilities more easily and plan new services.
RAAC and asbestos management
New applications for RAAC and asbestos management involve carrying out digital surveys on mobile devices, which feed directly into the 3D model and visualise the different risk levels. By providing more accurate and timely data, the new system is driving more effective maintenance regimes to improve safety. At one hospital site alone, digitising asbestos management has cut the time needed to prepare information by up to 10 days per month.
The next phase will map the remaining four hospitals in the MFT’s estate and digitise building condition surveys to help tackle the maintenance backlog. This will involve mobile data capture feeding into the digital twin, providing a clearer picture of requirements and helping to prioritise resources. Replacing a manual spreadsheet approach, data and reports will be shared more easily among project teams. Energy usage data will also be added to the digital twin to help analyse and reduce energy costs.
Duncan Booth, head of health and social care at Esri UK, said: “Indoor mapping is playing a central role in the modernisation of MFT’s estates and facilities department by giving users situational awareness of the entire site. Optimising the use of existing buildings and making RAAC and asbestos management more efficient are the first of many new benefits. Already used at airports, universities and industrial sites, the technology is helping large organisations realise plans for digital twins and is now experiencing growth in healthcare.”
MFT’s plans for the future include: using Esri’s GIS platform to create applications for indoor navigation for patients and staff to reduce missed appointments; contact tracing of patients to help stop the spread of pathogens inside the hospital; and digital asset tracking, enabling equipment such as beds, scanners or wheelchairs to be located more quickly.
BIS Consult director Nicholas Campbell-Voegt added: “This project shows how smart use of data can transform NHS estates. By creating a single source of truth for assets and space, MFT is paving the way for a new standard in how trusts manage their estates. The approach provides a blueprint that other NHS organisations can follow, helping build smarter, safer and more sustainable healthcare environments.”
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