Israel Israel currently has at least three hospitals with dedicated underground facilities.
Sourasky Medical Center Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center is the main
hospital serving
Tel Aviv,
Israel. It is the third-largest hospital complex in the country. In 2011, a 700-1,000 bed bombproof emergency facility was opened. The building, with 13 stories above ground and four stories underground, provides protection against conventional, chemical and biological attack. Construction began in 2008. The cost of the building was $110 million, with a donation of $45 million from Israeli billionaire
Sammy Ofer. The architect was
Arad Sharon, grandson of
Arieh Sharon who designed the original facility.
Rambam Hospital Rambam Health Care Campus the largest medical center in
northern Israel and fifth largest in
Israel, began in October 2010 work on a protected emergency underground hospital designed to withstand conventional, chemical, and biological attacks. The project included a three-floor parking lot that could be transformed at short notice into a 2,000-bed hospital. The hospital can generate its own power and store enough oxygen, drinking water and medical supplies for up to three days.
Beilinson Hospital The 90 million shekel fortified emergency room at
Beilinson Hospital in
Petach Tikvah has gone operational, becoming Israel’s largest ER. The 5,000 square meter (58,000 square feet) facility is capable of treating 200,000 patients annually. There is also a trauma center capable of addressing numerous patients simultaneously.
Sweden Södersjukhuset The hospital
Södersjukhuset in
Stockholm has an underground complex measuring 4,700 square meters (50,600 square feet) called DEMC (Disaster Emergency Center), which was completed and inaugurated on 25 November 1994. In peacetime the complex is used for training and scientific research. In case of disaster or war the complex is fully operational as a normal hospital, it has 270 beds in peacetime and 160 in wartime.
Syria Doctors and international N.G.O.s have created an elaborate network of underground hospitals throughout Syria. They have installed cameras in intensive-care units, so that doctors abroad can monitor patients by Skype and direct technicians to administer proper treatment.
Aleppo In 2016, because of the number of hospitals that have been damaged or destroyed in the city, hospitals have moved underground.
Ghouta The 2019 Syrian-Danish documentary film
The Cave is about a makeshift underground hospital nicknamed "the Cave" in Eastern Ghouta. == References ==