Morgue the dimensions of two football pitches is being inbuilt east London to carry thousands of coronavirus victims from NHS Nightingale as Britain's price surges by 563 to 2,352
Mortuary is being developed ashore on the brink of the town of London crematorium
it's expected to require the dead from the Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre
The grim news of the event was relayed to local residents in letters
Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and will you see a doctor?
A new morgue which may hold thousands of tragic covid-19 victims, including those from the Nightingale coronavirus hospital, is being inbuilt East London.
The mortuary, about the dimensions of two football pitches, is being developed on forest land on the brink of the town of London crematorium and cemetery and is predicted to require the dead from the new Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre.
The morgue’s proximity to the hospital, which is a smaller amount than three miles away, and therefore the cemetery has been planned to form it easier to ferry bodies from the temporary mortuary to their final resting place or the furnaces.
The grim news of the event was relayed to local residents in letters placed through their letter boxes from Newham Mayor Rokhsana Fiaz.
Ground works begin on a short lived mortuary on grassland near Manor Park, east London
The mortuary, about the dimensions of two football pitches, is being developed on forest land on the brink of the town of London crematorium and cemetery
The mortuary is predicted to require the dead from the new Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre
Around the same time builders began erecting wooden fencing round the site and diggers moved in.
The construction of the mortuary is that the latest development to battle the pandemic after the govt put up make-shift testing facilities at Ikea in Wembley, and another swabbing site at Chessington.
Downing Street is desperately trying to build up the amount of checks administered , amid fears 85 per cent of self-isolating NHS staff could be off unnecessarily thanks to a scarcity of screening. No10 today admitted just 2,000 frontline NHS workers are tested for coronavirus.
Mortuary is being developed ashore on the brink of the town of London crematorium
it's expected to require the dead from the Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre
The grim news of the event was relayed to local residents in letters
Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and will you see a doctor?
A new morgue which may hold thousands of tragic covid-19 victims, including those from the Nightingale coronavirus hospital, is being inbuilt East London.
The mortuary, about the dimensions of two football pitches, is being developed on forest land on the brink of the town of London crematorium and cemetery and is predicted to require the dead from the new Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre.
The morgue’s proximity to the hospital, which is a smaller amount than three miles away, and therefore the cemetery has been planned to form it easier to ferry bodies from the temporary mortuary to their final resting place or the furnaces.
The grim news of the event was relayed to local residents in letters placed through their letter boxes from Newham Mayor Rokhsana Fiaz.
Ground works begin on a short lived mortuary on grassland near Manor Park, east London
The mortuary, about the dimensions of two football pitches, is being developed on forest land on the brink of the town of London crematorium and cemetery
The mortuary is predicted to require the dead from the new Nightingale Hospital at the ExCel Centre
Around the same time builders began erecting wooden fencing round the site and diggers moved in.
The construction of the mortuary is that the latest development to battle the pandemic after the govt put up make-shift testing facilities at Ikea in Wembley, and another swabbing site at Chessington.
Downing Street is desperately trying to build up the amount of checks administered , amid fears 85 per cent of self-isolating NHS staff could be off unnecessarily thanks to a scarcity of screening. No10 today admitted just 2,000 frontline NHS workers are tested for coronavirus.

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