Underground hospital

[2] A hospital was built inside tunnels under Arras, named Carrière Wellington, with facilities for 700 beds.

[3] Hohlgangsanlage 8 was an artillery storage tunnel build by Organisation Todt workers for the Germans during World War II in St. Lawrence, Jersey, which was converted to a hospital to deal with casualties after the Normandy landings on 6 June 1944.

Hohlgangsanlage 7/40 (Ho.7/40) two interconnected cave passage installations of 7,000m²,[4]: 37  were built in 1942-43 by German Fortress Engineer and Organisation Todt workers to store vehicles, ammunition, food, fuel and equipment.

[10] The 90 million shekel fortified emergency room at Beilinson Hospital in Petach Tikvah has gone operational, becoming Israel’s largest ER.

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.

They have installed cameras in intensive-care units, so that doctors abroad can monitor patients by Skype and direct technicians to administer proper treatment.

The rail entrance to the complex at Södersjukhuset, 1940s.