Finished inside: The Aurach ambulance is ready for use.
The ambulance is already parked in the new house at night.
The move should be completed by November 25th.
Fischbachau
- Despite Corona and deadline pressure, the new Aurach rescue station managed to hit the spot, with which it ensures continuous emergency care in its catchment area: The new building was completed in time before the lease for the old building expired, Mayor Johannes Lohwasser (FWG) reported when asked .
The work on the outdoor facilities should not be finished until spring.
But inside, the ambulance station is ready for action - the garage, disinfection room and lounge are waiting for operations, and the training room on the upper floor is waiting for the first seminars.
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Rescue station in Aurach ready on time - move is underway
The ambulance is currently moving.
The ambulance is already in the new building overnight, reports Lohwasser.
The Rosenheim ambulance, which operates the Aurach rescue station, plans to move operations to the new building by November 25 at the latest, says Managing Director Gabriel Mayer.
The guard is currently coordinating its operations from the old building.
The move should be completed by the end of the month.
It couldn't be any faster because the guard also keeps operations going and drives missions.
As reported, the lease for the outpatient clinic for your old building in Aurach expired at the end of October.
The ambulance can still use the common room there until the end of November, but it has already had to vacate the vehicle hall.
For this reason, the Fischbachau community had a 23 x 14 meter new building erected at the northern entrance to Aurach, diagonally opposite the previous accommodation, for 1.2 million euros, which had to be ready for use by the beginning of November.
The community will now rent this to the ambulance so that it can maintain emergency care even after moving out of its old home.
The new rescue station is a new building in a hurry.
The project, which started in January after tough negotiations, was under time pressure from the start.
Then Corona came and made the already tight schedule even more difficult.
The approval of the district office was delayed by two months in the first lockdown.
The ever-threatening second lockdown could have postponed completion further, or in the worst case, tore a hole in the emergency care.
In order to catch up, work was in full swing, despite the pandemic.
The fact that the new building was finished on time despite all the difficulties, says Lohwasser, is mainly due to the construction company: “It was a project with little friction.” The parties involved, especially the Fischbachau general contractor Josef Vogt commissioned by the community, did everything possible To meet the deadline.
"If it works so well, it's no coincidence."