Södersjukhuset

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Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden
Södersjukhuset
Stockholm County Council
The hospital viewed from the south-west
Map
Geography
LocationSödermalm, Stockholm, Sweden
Organisation
FundingPublic hospital
TypeDistrict General
Services
Emergency departmentYes
Beds647[1]
HelipadYes (ICAO: ESHC)
History
Opened3 April 1944
Links
Websitesodersjukhuset.se

Södersjukhuset (Sös) is one of the largest hospitals in Stockholm, Sweden. Constructed between 1937 and 1944, it was designed by architects Hjalmar Cederström and Hermann Imhäuser, and the construction was contracted to Toll Byggnads AB. Södersjukhuset has the largest emergency department in Scandinavia.[2]

King Gustaf V inaugurated Södersjukhuset on 3 April 1944. At the time, the building was the largest in Scandinavia.[2] New buildings were added to Södersjukhuset in the 1950s, and Södersjukhuset underwent major refurbishment between 2000 and 2003.

With more than 4,000 employees,[1] Södersjukhuset is the third largest employer in Stockholm.

The hospital has an underground complex measuring 4,500 square meters (48,500 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, with backup electricity, water, radio and telecommunication supplies available in such cases. The DEMC is situated close to the Årstaviken river (sv). Plans for an underground hospital (originally intended to be solely for military use) were however already present in the initial plans for Södersjukhuset in the 1930s, and a 550 metre long tunnel branching off from the Södra station–Hammarbyhamnen–Stadsgården freight branch line (sv:Industrispåret Södra station–Hammarbyhamnen–Stadsgården), as well as a massive cavern linking to said tunnel, were built along with the hospital itself. However with the end of World War II just over a year later in 1945, the underground military hospital was subsequently deemed unnecessary and the cavern was later used as a storage area for many years before being rebuilt as the DEMC in the early-1990s.

Notable deaths

References

  1. ^ a b "Om Södersjukhuset" (in Swedish). Södersjukhuset AB. Retrieved 28 October 2014.
  2. ^ a b "SÖS Historia". Södersjukhuset. Södersjukhuset. Retrieved 9 January 2016.

External links

  • Official website
Authority control databases Edit this at Wikidata
International
  • ISNI
  • VIAF
National
  • Germany
  • United States
  • Czech Republic