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Wuhan native pitches in to help build hospital

By ZHOU LIHUA/LIU KUN/CAI HONG | China Daily Global | Updated: 2020-02-06 09:03
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Wuhan natives work at the construction site at the Leishenshan Hospital. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

The workers were given a course on safety before undertaking their tasks, and were required to wear masks, safety helmets and winter coats at the construction site. They also were told that protecting themselves properly would help protect others as well.

They moved building materials, tied steel bars, cleaned up on-site garbage and poured concrete as needed.

Fu said he felt bad that he had missed out on building the 1,000-bed Huoshenshan ("fire god mountain") Hospital, which opened on Monday after being completed in just 10 days.

It isn't the first time China has built a hospital in so short a time. In 2003, Xiaotangshan Hospital in Beijing was constructed in just seven days to treat victims of SARS.

The two hospitals on the outskirts of Wuhan will serve as quarantine institutions for treating patients infected with 2019-nCoV.Along with hundreds of workers at the construction site of Leishenshan Hospital, Fu worked from 6 am to 6 pm.

A big challenge for Fu and his colleagues was getting to the work site, since all public transportation in Wuhan has been suspended.

Fu asked a friend for several minivans, and the vehicles were provided, so he and several colleagues were given free rides each day.

Because it was still cold in Wuhan, Fu's ears were frostbitten, and since he wore a mask all day, he always had clear marks on his face.

Leishenshan Hospital, which has 1,500 beds, covers an area of 75,000 square meters. Construction, which began on Jan 25, was completed on Wednesday, and the hospital was expected to begin admitting patients on Thursday.

The construction workers, whose race to build the two new hospitals was livestreamed, have become heroes.

The workers were well rewarded-$150 pay on average for each day, according to China Global Television Network.

Their work was not just noticed by people in China, either. Architects, healthcare professionals and authorities in other countries are among those who hope to see what lessons can be learned from the rapid building of emergency response centers in the event of outbreaks or natural disasters.

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