We are standing in the afternoon rain in a section of the grounds of the huge former Aarhus Amtssygehus (County Hospital) that was used from 1883 to 2018. It is near the city centre here in Aarhus, Denmark. To our left: a bombastic four-storey red-brick building with lots of windows – a later addition in the 1970s. Beyond: one of the original buildings from the late 1880s whose architecture is world-famous in Aarhus: red brickwork with single rows of yellow bricks, like ribbons, under the row of windows for each storey. To our left, a black construction work hoarding with colourful street art painted on it. To our right, a low green hedge and a few trees in front of a low building. In front of us, a single lamp-post on a messy grubby patch of ground covered in building dirt and dust. A large section of it is covered in a T-shaped patch of tarmac, haphazardly filling in, temporarily, the holes from which cranes lifted out the two generators that still worked in the underground bomb-proof hospital rooms built after the second world war. The respectively 380 kVA and 750 kVA generators were donated by Aarhus Kommune (council) and construction company developer Raundahl & Moesby to Ukraine. Danish charity group Generators For Ukraine transported them to a hospital in Odessa that treats both civilians and frontline soldiers. It had previously been hit by power cuts of up to 8 hours a day.
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