Planning and construction , the site of the hospital, in 2015 On 21 and 22 March 2020, military planners and NHS England staff visited
ExCeL London – an exhibition and convention centre in the
Custom House area of
Newham,
East London – to "determine if the armed forces could support the NHS response to the outbreak". Plans to create the hospital were announced in a press briefing by
Health Secretary Matt Hancock on 24 March. The facility was planned and constructed in conjunction with the
British Armed Forces and British architects
BDP, with the mission being run from the
Headquarters Standing Joint Command in
Aldershot, which coordinates resilience missions for the UK. The main contractor was CFES. The facility was formally opened on 3 April 2020 by the
Prince of Wales (via video link) in a ceremony during which the hospital's Head of Nursing unveiled a plaque. The first patients were admitted on 7 April. The television medical drama
Holby City uses operational
ventilators on set, and these were donated to the hospital.
First wave (March - May 2020) Over the course of the first wave of the COVID pandemic in the United Kingdom, the hospital treated only 54 patients. Preexisting permanent hospitals had successfully managed to increase their intensive care capacity to respond to the growing demands of the pandemic, and as a result the Nightingale Hospital was surplus to requirements. On 21 April 2020,
The Guardian reported that staff at the hospital had claimed that the hospital had been "obliged to reject people needing care because it cannot get enough of the nurses usually based in other hospitals to work there". This allegation was rebutted by a
Department of Health and Social Care spokesperson, who stated that no coronavirus patients were being refused treatment due to a shortage of staff as the new hospital was to provide overflow capacity if required.
Second wave and vaccinations (January 2021) During the second wave of COVID-19, the hospital reopened for patients recovering from COVID, and patients being treated for non-COVID ailments. Following the development of the first COVID-19 vaccines, in January 2021 another part of the ExCeL centre was reconfigured to provide
COVID vaccinations.
Permanent closure In March 2021, it was announced the hospital would permanently close the following month, along with the other Nightingale Hospitals constructed at the beginning of the pandemic. ==Operational details==