is carrying out a dry run with a specialist mannequin. we can check his airway, we check if he is breathing, we can record the respiratory rate, you can even listen to his chest. the real patients will also need a large amount of equipment moving with them, adding to the complexity. can you get the lift, please? we have to consider the fact that a lot of our equipment is driven by batteries and of course batteries have time limitations to them so all of our planning considers what might happen and what backup and mitigation we would have in place. and already the runthrough�*s revealed that one lift is not enough. no, neal hasjust said on the day we can have two lifts. back on their way, the team now approaches the most crucial part of the journey. this is where patients leave the old hospital and go to the new. it's 100 metre tunnel, it's only for patients, they are going one by one and once they are in there, it is vital that nothing happens which could hold them up or anybody else. before we go through the tunnel, we will stop and check that everything