Ramla : Hours after Hamas militants attacked southern Israel on Oct. 7, the country's new fortified, subterranean blood bank kicked into action. Staffers moved equipment into the underground bunker and started saving lives.
The Marcus National Blood Services Center in Ramla, near Tel Aviv, had been scheduled to open within days, but with more than 1,400 people in Israel killed since the Hamas raids most killed during the initial attack the timeline changed. It became very clear we needed to move with the war plans because this was exactly the moment, the event it was built for, said Dr. Eilat Shinar, director of the national blood services division of Magen David Adom Israel's medical emergency, disaster, ambulance and blood service.
Nestled some 15 meters (50 feet) underground at its lowest level, the $135-million, 6-story, state-of-the-art facility is protected from rockets, missiles, chemical attacks and earthquakes, ensuring blood processing can continue when it's needed most. Shiner said the center provided tens of thousands of units of blood in the days that followed the Hamas attacks.
We worked very hard to supply everything they needed," she said. "We had many injured and we had to treat them. The former blood bank, which was built in the 1980s, was not able to handle the country's needs in times of war, and had been exposed but not damaged during earlier conflicts, the center said. After Israel's third war against Hamas in 2014, when rockets reached Tel Aviv and other major cities, discussions began about the need to create a more protected facility.
The new center has the capacity to store almost twice the amount of blood of its predecessor half a million units a year compared with 270,000 and has processed more blood than has ever been held in Israel's reserves. There was a clear understanding that because rockets were flying close to the center any other place in the center can be targeted, said Moshe Noyovich, the project engineer and representative in Israel for the American Friends of Magen David Adom, which primarily funded the new center.