Hospital building work that would normally take weeks is being done in days as teams work around the clock to expand facilities that will be crucial in the treatment of Covid-19 patients.
The huge effort by hospital engineers and local builders has raised the spirits of intensive care specialists, who know they will need all the help they can get to cope with an expected surge in the number of patients needing hospital care.
Engineers have made rapid improvements to Wellington Hospital's intensive care unit (ICU) - converting a new six-bed extension into a large negative pressure room and building two new air locks in just a few days. Such work could normally take months from planning to completion.
Negative pressure rooms use lower air pressure to prevent internal air from reaching the rest of the hospital, allowing patients with infectious conditions to be isolated. Air locks give an additional buffer to the outside world.
Dr Alex Psirides, an intensivist at the hospital, tweeted photos of the new facilities tonight, and passed on his thanks to the "amazing" hospital engineers.