Date Published: 06/05/2026
Defunct Camposol Hospital up for auction after lasting just six months before going bankrupt
The Guadalentín Hospital was supposed to revolutionise healthcare in southwest Murcia, but it never even reached full capacity
It was supposed to be a revolution in healthcare for Camposol and the wider southwest of Murcia, backed by the regional government, celebrated by the local community and built at speed with €11 million worth of state-of-the-art facilities. Instead, the
Hospital del Guadalentín on the Camposol urbanisation lasted just six months before closing its doors, and it's now heading for auction as part of ongoing bankruptcy proceedings.
The project was developed by private group Mederi Salud and launched with considerable fanfare, with the President of the Region of Murcia, Fernando López Miras, and Regional Minister of Health, Juan José Pedreño, among those who backed it from the outset.
The hospital came equipped with three operating theatres, a high-tech Da Vinci robot for precision surgery, six consulting rooms and a 38-bed hospitalisation area.
It became the main sponsor of local football team Club Deportivo Bala Azul, announced it would accept medical insurance from international companies and
opened a 24-hour emergency service, laboratory and diagnostic area in 2024.
The problems began almost immediately. Despite the impressive facilities, the hospital failed to secure agreements with either the Murcian Health Service or private insurers, leaving it entirely dependent on a purely private revenue model that simply wasn't generating enough income.
By the autumn of 2024, liquidity problems were already becoming apparent, with
suppliers going unpaid and staff experiencing delays in their wages. Management attempted an internal restructuring, cutting the emergency service from 24 hours down to seven hours a day and drawing up plans for staff redundancies.
When the emergency service closed completely in November 2024, initially described as a temporary measure, it effectively signalled the end. In an area with significant tourist seasonality, the emergency service had been central to the hospital's viability, and without it the project couldn't survive.
Operations ceased entirely in early 2025, with debts owed to employees, suppliers and construction companies. The management company, Camposol Health Services, filed for bankruptcy in July 2025, barely ten months after the hospital first opened.
The entire facility is now being auctioned through Trademat Auctions, with bidding open until May 21.
Luis María Arnaiz, director and co-founder of Trademat, pointed out that bankruptcy proceedings don't necessarily mean the end of the road, explaining that they often allow companies to restructure financially and return to profitability.
Whether that means a fresh attempt at private healthcare in
Mazarrón or a completely different use for the complex remains to be seen, but for now the building sits empty, its facilities largely unused and its ambitious promises unfulfilled.
Image: Trademat Auctions
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