China's first coronavirus hospital OPENS after workers and volunteers spend two days converting an empty building into a 1,000-bed medical centre - The Most Popular Lists

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China's first coronavirus hospital OPENS after workers and volunteers spend two days converting an empty building into a 1,000-bed medical centre


China's first coronavirus hospital has opened today in a city near Wuhan after workers and volunteers spent just two days converting an empty building to a 1,000-bed emergency facility.

The first batch of coronavirus patients were transferred to the Dabie Mountain Regional Medical Centre at around 10:30pm local time today, reported local media.

The project was complete within 48 hours thanks to the joint effort of staff from construction firms, utility companies and paramilitary police officers, the city's authority said.


The hospital building in the city's Huangzhou District was originally built as a new branch of Huanggang Central Hospital and expected to open in May.

The Dabie Mountain Regional Medical Centre is the first dedicated coronavirus hospital to have opened in China. Workers and volunteers spent two days revamping an empty building

On Friday, the local authority ordered the building, which was complete but empty, to be used for treating coronavirus patients only.


Revamping works started from Saturday.

A picture released by the Huanggang government shows construction workers installing necessary facilities on the site of Dabie Mountain Regional Medical Centre on January 25

By Monday, all of the beds had been set up by volunteers, and water, electricity and internet had also been installed, according to the government of Huanggang.


Footage released by China's Cover News shows medical workers familiarising themselves with the facility today before the patients started to arrive.

A handout from the Huanggang government shows workers from the city's electricity company working to connect the building to the grid so it can treat coronavirus patients

More than 500 workers and a dozen heavy vehicles worked two days and nights in order to complete the task on time.


Situated 75 kilometres (46.6 miles) south-west of Wuhan, Huanggang has a population of around 7.5 million and is one of the cities that have been hit by the coronavirus the hardest.

By Monday, all of the beds had been set up by volunteers, and water, electricity and internet had also been connected, according to the government of Huanggang

It went into lockdown last Thursday, the same day as Wuhan.

The coronavirus has killed at least 131 people - all in China - and sickened over 6,000 worldwide.


As of yesterday, four people from Huanggang have been killed by the deadly virus and 213 people have been infected.

The coronavirus epidemic has killed at least 131 people - all in China - and sickened nearly 6,000 worldwide as of today. In the picture above, a medical worker (right) rests in a chair next to a patient at a hospital in Wuhan in central China's Hubei Province on January 23

Although the Huanggang coronavirus hospital was the first to open, it was not the first to be planned.


The government of Wuhan announced last Thursday that they would build a coronavirus hospital in a week.

The intensifying health crisis has led the authorities to quarantine at least 56 million people living in central China's Hubei Province. In the picture above, people wearing face masks to avoid the disease queue to take a taxi at the Beijing railway station on January 27

There are at least four of such facilities completed or being completed in the country.


All of them are modelled on a temporary medical centre in Beijing in 2003, which was built in seven days to tackle SARS and treated one-seventh of the country's SARS patient in the space of two months.

All of the coronavirus hospitals are modelled on a temporary medical centre, which was built in Beijing in seven days to tackle SARS in 2003 and treated one-seventh of the country's SARS patient in the space of two months. In the picture above, dozens of diggers work to build the six-acre coronavirus hospital in the Caidian District in the western suburb of Wuhan, China

The authority of Wuhan is building two special facilities to treat a total of 2,300 coronavirus patients.


Incredible time-lapse footage has captured the city's first coronavirus hospital, Huoshenshan or Fire God Mountain Hospital, starting to take shape after just four days of construction.


The emergency facility is situated in the western suburbs of Wuhan, the epicentre of an outbreak of the novel coronavirus.


The authorities have instructed four construction companies to toil through the Chinese New Year holiday in order to complete the six-acre, 1,000-bed medical centre in Caidian District in a week. It is expected to receive its first patients on February 3, according to state media.

The Wuhan authorities have instructed four construction companies to toil through the Chinese New Year holiday in order to complete the urgent task. This photo shows excavators and trucks on the construction site of a new hospital on January 27

The second hospital in Wuhan, named the Leishanshan or Thunder God Mountain Hospital, is situated in Jiangxia District, a suburban area to the south of the city centre.


Construction started on Saturday and the hospital is set to have two buildings containing a total of 1,500 beds, according to Xinhua News Agency. Around 2,000 medical workers are expected to treat patients in the special 7.4-acre centre, it is reported.

China's central government has sent around 6,000 doctors to Wuhan from across the nation to help the city deal with the outbreak. In the picture above, a medical worker attends to a patient in the intensive care unit at Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University in Wuhan on January 24

Another hospital is being built in Zhenzhou in central China's Henan Province.


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This article first appeared on Daily Mail.

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