Gleneagles Hospital started as a 45-bed nursing home in 1957. The British European Association, established when Singapore was slowly gaining independence from the United Kingdom, was the founder of Glenagles Hospital. On 16 January 1958, Gleneagles Nursing Home was incorporated as a private company and known as Gleneagles Hospital Limited. It opened its doors as a hospital on 8 June 1959. From 1979 to 1980, it developed into a 126-bed “medical center” that provided a wide range of medical services.

In May 1987, Parkway Holdings acquired Glenagles Hospital for S$46 million and expanded it from 1988 to 1991. Its new additions were a 10-storey hospital block, 14 operating theaters, and 150 consulting suites. Its range of services grew to include hospital management and consultancy services.

The 221-bed hospital now offers specialist, diagnostic and imaging services, with a wide range of specialist, diagnostic and imaging services that spans different medical specialties including oncology, orthopaedic surgery, gastroenterology, cardiology, and obstetrics and gynaecology.

In 1999, Gleneagles Hospital became South-East Asia’s first hospital to use SurgiScope for neurosurgery, ENT, and spinal surgeries. SurgiScope is a robotised tool-holder designed for microscope-assisted neurosurgical applications. In 1998, the couple Susan Tjokrosetio and Andre Prijono became the parents of the first sextuplets in Southeast Asia. In 2002, the Asian American Liver Center at Gleneagles Hospital became the first hospital in Southeast Asia to perform live donor liver transplantation for children.

According to Wikipedia and gleneagles.com.sg