'Hey do you fancy going somewhere completely different for a change?' was the question that was posed to me in August by one of my contacts as I was planning various parts of my America trip out.
What eventually unfolded was our absolutely mental no-sleep weekender which involved three flights in two days, a bus ride with an ex-prostitute, falling asleep in bars, an LGBT parade and a very nearly lost bag containing all my everything I needed to live, and three epic locations. The Power Plant (report up separately) was the first port of call, and two buses, a train, two planes and a taxi later - involving a very nail-biting half hour gap to reach our connection in Atlanta which is the biggest airport in the entire observable universe - we arrived outside the best hospital I have ever explored.
This former military hospital buried deep in the United States shut it's doors in 1979 and although largely stripped, owing to it's location, good security (some serious fencing going on here!) and the open museum next door which occupies one of the old buildings has remained almost totally undamaged and unbreached since closure. I feel privileged to have seen somewhere even most American explorers don't know exists.
The building is shaped in roughly a 'T' shape with two angular wings jutting out to either side of the 'bridge' of the 'T'
This place is all about the incredible decay....
....and the never ending corridors
Most of the doors have hand-painted signs on them, the numbers and some of the lettering in gold and outlined.
The main big wards were situated on each floor at each end of the 'T' shaped main building.
One of the few relics from the hospitals past was this vintage Coke vending machine
The laboratory
Dental
Surgical suite
An anechoic chamber for conducting hearing tests
Oh yeah in the basement it also has a morgue with slab complete with head restraint, which was still able to be adjusted via the little wheel on the side.
Loads more photos here https://www.flickr.com/photos/mookie427/sets/72157646750927624/
What eventually unfolded was our absolutely mental no-sleep weekender which involved three flights in two days, a bus ride with an ex-prostitute, falling asleep in bars, an LGBT parade and a very nearly lost bag containing all my everything I needed to live, and three epic locations. The Power Plant (report up separately) was the first port of call, and two buses, a train, two planes and a taxi later - involving a very nail-biting half hour gap to reach our connection in Atlanta which is the biggest airport in the entire observable universe - we arrived outside the best hospital I have ever explored.
This former military hospital buried deep in the United States shut it's doors in 1979 and although largely stripped, owing to it's location, good security (some serious fencing going on here!) and the open museum next door which occupies one of the old buildings has remained almost totally undamaged and unbreached since closure. I feel privileged to have seen somewhere even most American explorers don't know exists.
The building is shaped in roughly a 'T' shape with two angular wings jutting out to either side of the 'bridge' of the 'T'
This place is all about the incredible decay....
....and the never ending corridors
Most of the doors have hand-painted signs on them, the numbers and some of the lettering in gold and outlined.
The main big wards were situated on each floor at each end of the 'T' shaped main building.
One of the few relics from the hospitals past was this vintage Coke vending machine
The laboratory
Dental
Surgical suite
An anechoic chamber for conducting hearing tests
Oh yeah in the basement it also has a morgue with slab complete with head restraint, which was still able to be adjusted via the little wheel on the side.
Loads more photos here https://www.flickr.com/photos/mookie427/sets/72157646750927624/