Inside Your Ambulances
This feature report shows the inside of ambulances different in time and in place. From the squarish ones to the rounder ones, from the ones with just a simple stretcher to those that have every modern equipment inside, each of these ambulances reflect a need, a necessity, and careful, constant use. Enjoy!

A Volkswagen Transporter TDI 4motion from Nebbiuno in Novara, in the Northern Italy. Photo by Manuela Zonca.

Tuffy Flor’s ambulance, spotted in Ouray, Colorado. Photo by Dr. Jo Moshinskie

A photo taken in the early 1950s. Photo by Patrick George.

A vintage unit.
Photo by Jo Tripp, from the Langley BC car show, September 2007.
.
A German ambulance unit fitted for the Beijing Olympics.

A WAS unit destined for Egypt. Photos taken at the Rettmobil 2008 exhibition by tragesessel4350

A Renault Master Lm35 Dci 120 Lwb, named the “Responder”, used by the British Red Cross. The vehicle weight was reduced in order to allow more drivers the capacity to respond.
Photo by Richard Barron, taken in Falkirk, Scotland.

Inside a Japanese ambulance.
Photo by Allison Schultz

A Fiat Ducato BLS ambulance used by the Spanish Red Cross, which apparently can be quickly converted into an ALS unit, and contains the drugs and medications should there be the need.
Photo by Gonzalo Andrés.

A 2001 Mercedes Benz 4.16CDi/U.V.G. “Premia” accident and emergency ambulance, part of the North East Ambulance Service (NEAS) in the Northeast of England.
Photo by Peter Murphy.

A Swedish unit, captured at Rettmobil 2009, a European trade show for “emergency and mobility”.

A ambulance from the Bremen Fire Dept. works for the Bremen City EMS. Above two photos by tragessessel.

Kofu City ambulance by tibbs2

Yorkshire Ambulance Service in Sheffield. Photo by Paramedix.

Share your news