About time I got something up here. First of all, huge thanks to Clebby, clebby's mate, wifebeater, ConcentrationF, the other knowledgeable chap and his girlfriend for an absolutely cracking day.
This started off as a failed trip to Cane Hill -- escorted off by security. Our next port of call was the Coulsdon deep shelter, only to find it was cemented in. As a last ditch effort we went onto West Park -- and what a place.
Onto the pics:
Underground tunnel - one of a network of tunnels criss-crossing under the main hall:
The main hall:
Moving onwards:
Corridors linking the wards/buildings:
Into the wards:
Collapsing floor:
Totally random hoover room:
Found (At Home!) Sept. 1966
Lots more on flickr
Again thanks to everyone involved for such an awesome day.
This started off as a failed trip to Cane Hill -- escorted off by security. Our next port of call was the Coulsdon deep shelter, only to find it was cemented in. As a last ditch effort we went onto West Park -- and what a place.
West Park Hospital stands not far from Epsom Common. The hospital is large in scale spreading out across the grounds as a complex of wards and villas radiating out form the charred remains of the main hall.
Built in the 1920's West Park was the Eleventh and last in a long line of asylums serving the London area forming the filth and final part of the "Epsom Cluster" A complex of 5 large Psychiatric and epileptic hospitals. (Other hospitals Being: Manor, Horton, St Ebbas and Long Grove.)
West park was built to the "colony" design. This was an idea imported form America: Small groups of wards grouped together within the same building effectively creating isolated communities within those wards, each building is linked to the others creating a web like maze of corridors that stretches across West Park.
Onto the pics:
Underground tunnel - one of a network of tunnels criss-crossing under the main hall:
The main hall:
Moving onwards:
Corridors linking the wards/buildings:
Into the wards:
Collapsing floor:
Totally random hoover room:
Found (At Home!) Sept. 1966
Lots more on flickr
Again thanks to everyone involved for such an awesome day.
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