In the early 19th century, with the support of the Braniczki Counts, a hospital operated on the outskirts of the town of Stavyshche, on the road from Bila Tserkva. As of 1899, it was headed by Doctor Wacław Yosypovych Horoh. The hospital had 24 beds, with 15 for men and 9 for women. Medications from the hospital pharmacy were provided free of charge and only with a doctor's prescription.
In 1911, with a subsidy from Count Wladislav Braniczki, the Zemstvo began the construction of a new two-story brick hospital with 50 beds.
The design of the hospital was inspired by the "age of aviation," resembling a biplane aircraft:
By the onset of World War I in 1914, only the first floor with 35 beds had been completed. However, there is evidence that the hospital functioned during the war. Three doctors worked there:
The second floor was completed in Soviet Ukraine in 1923. In the photographs from that time, it can be seen that the hospital was named after the 10th anniversary of the Red Army and belonged to the Bilokurakine District Health Inspection.
The building belongs to the Stavyshchenska Hospital of the Stavyshche Town Council, Kyiv Oblast.
It is recognized as a local architectural monument with the protective number 86-Kv. The architect's name is unknown.