Exploring Abandoned Mental Hospital: Horror Past Uncovered

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 май 2023
  • In this video, we explore an abandoned asylum in Wales that was built in the 1920s. Despite having little equipment left behind, the architectural details are special, leading us to discuss the contrast between the UK's lunatic treatment of the Victorian period.
    SUBTITLES AVAILABLE
    Help support the channel -
    / urbandoned
    www.urbandonedteam.com/store
    paypal.me/urbandoneddonate
    Other links -
    www.urbandonedteam.com/
    / urbandoned_
    urbandoned_?lang=...
    / discord
    / urbandoned
    / @urbandoned
    Our urbex library -
    • Exploring an Abandoned...
    abandoned urbandoned derelict urbex explore exploring uk england united kingdom wales welsh asylum hospital psychiatric medical mental institute institution lunatic main hall corridors dark horrors evil treatment deinstitutionalisation decay power electricity documentary walkthrough video
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 238

  • @-D3m0nikaSpirit-
    @-D3m0nikaSpirit- 2 месяца назад +20

    I can't believe this was posted almost a year ago and that it only has about two thousand likes? The way you are presenting your footage without any "creepy" (annoying) music and how you are so respectful not touching the old documents or not moving anything around is simply fantastic! You have earned another sub! I love this video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @Americangirldoll1239
    @Americangirldoll1239 Месяц назад +12

    As someone who has been in a mental health hospital before for my OCD I can’t imagine the horrendous treatment I would have received back then , the torture they put people through makes me sick

    • @Velo1010
      @Velo1010 28 дней назад +1

      I was in one for writing a suicide note that I was going to carry out. My employer found it on my desk so they wanted to intervene. The one I went to for if I can remember for two weeks was a very popular one in my city that’s located in a busy but nice area.

    • @tiffanymcintyre8375
      @tiffanymcintyre8375 16 дней назад

      I too have been in a mental hospital. It was about 18 years ago. I honestly can't complain about my stay there (court ordered for 7 days.)

    • @Velo1010
      @Velo1010 16 дней назад

      @@tiffanymcintyre8375 never understood why any courts or police get involved. They act as if they own your life. If a person wants to end their life it’s now the business of the law to intervene. It’s a family matter that should involve counseling.

  • @sarasate89
    @sarasate89 5 месяцев назад +25

    I was a patient in one of the last victorian style asylums in the UK shortly before it closed, back in 2006. It was eerie because they had been closing it down ward by ward. My ward was about one of two left. In its heyday it would have been absolutely sprawling. Miles and miles of corridors, vast land, a theatre, shops on site, hairdressers, a church etc. It was like a village.

    • @karinaescott505
      @karinaescott505 Месяц назад +1

      😮😮😮 are you OK now tho❤❤

    • @ranisrikumar5735
      @ranisrikumar5735 Месяц назад

      @@karinaescott505Pretty normal, see the words ❤🎉

    • @Velo1010
      @Velo1010 28 дней назад

      I’m glad RUclips is anonymous so can you share anything that you witnessed that raised eyebrows or patient abuse. I was in one (yea, I threatened to commit suicide (dumb thing considering I could have approached my situation in a more sane way). I never saw anything, but they gave me a drug (prescription) once. It knocked me out. The second time they told me to take I refused. I told them “hell no!” However the hospital staff don’t force it on me, they just said well it’s your right and choice.

  • @donp2926
    @donp2926 5 месяцев назад +11

    Whenever I watch these abandoned videos, I always get a weird/funny feeling inside. ...I always think of the people who passed through these places, where are some of them now, who died there, and always think about how these hospitals etc used to be a bustling place and I always feel like they are memories that I have lived. It's really hard to explain the feeling and I'm high as hell right now

  • @charb_0119
    @charb_0119 Год назад +81

    it's actually really sad as someone who's going to a mental hospital in a month here to see the past of neglected people who just really needed help in life like myself, but were mistreated and neglected. Thanks for covering this.

    • @thehangingparsiple5692
      @thehangingparsiple5692 Год назад +22

      To be fair, when asylums first opened in the Victorian era, they weren't actually the cruel places they're painted out to be. Around this time psychology and psychiatry was only just taking off, and for the most part fresh air and taking up relaxing hobbies was found to be a cure for many cases; at the time there was a lot of 'hysteria' and 'melancholia' cases (anxiety and depression). Medication wasn't greatly evolved then, and doctors tried many new therapies with patients' best interests at heart.
      Things changed as asylums grew in popularity towards the end of the era into the start of the 1920s; too many patients, too little staff, and the development of medications.
      I hope I don't sound preachy.
      Hope things go well for you. ❤❤

    • @Urbandoned
      @Urbandoned  Год назад +9

      No problem - we think it's an important part of our history to keep reiterating.

    • @BeyondthePoint
      @BeyondthePoint Год назад +3

      @@thehangingparsiple5692 A good analysis on how asylums changed, that's the impression I've gotten from reading. I think we've overcomplicated mental health to some extent along the way.

    • @mikeheleniyelenick9759
      @mikeheleniyelenick9759 11 месяцев назад

      How interesting

    • @Sniperboy5551
      @Sniperboy5551 11 месяцев назад +1

      Good luck, but you might be over sharing.

  • @nataliesmith303
    @nataliesmith303 Год назад +36

    Such an interesting find. If only the walls could talk. Thanks for sharing guys

    • @greywebs1944
      @greywebs1944 Год назад +3

      I wouldn't want them to talk the pain and suffering they went through 😞

  • @user-bc9om6oe6d
    @user-bc9om6oe6d 6 месяцев назад +4

    What an amazing place, me and my mate went inside for a look about, what a waste of such an amazing building.

  • @iangraham871
    @iangraham871 Месяц назад +1

    You guys are the undoubted class leaders in this type of videography. The way you never force entry, never so much as disturb a document, even though you must be itching to find out more, and your superb commentary showing your fascination and sympathetic view of the buildings. The chequerboard corridors were a common feature of the asylums of that era. A girlfriend of mine did her psychiatric nurse training in Worcester in the early 80s, including at the notorious Powick Hospital featured in your video, and all the corridors were like that, with sedated and catatonic patients shuffling up and down to "elevator music" over the tannoy. Creepy! I'm not sure whether "care in the community" has been the success that Thatcher envisaged, and there does need to be more mental health provision in Britain, but these old places, with their outdated and often barbaric practices, were not the answer.
    Thanks guys!

  • @DEAD-DROP
    @DEAD-DROP Год назад +10

    Some amazing features, but really sad history.. Leaves you with a strange feeling...
    Great work guys!

  • @benlaz3729
    @benlaz3729 9 месяцев назад +4

    That place is cefyn coed my dad my my mum and my grandfather worked there for 25 years each they know a lot of history and I was brought up around that place in SWANSEA!!

  • @alibob1986
    @alibob1986 Год назад +7

    The "cells" at the beginning werealmost certainly bedrooms I would say. They can be locked from the inside, as well as being unlockable from the outside. The windows look to have a blind type mechanism which can be opened and closed from outside to allow staff to perform general observations without disturbing service users

  • @mannymac6678
    @mannymac6678 Год назад +15

    First thing picked up on was the masonic flooring 😮, sent chills down the spine, glad I will never have to stay there.
    Thanks for the vid
    .

  • @stephaniemcquillan1930
    @stephaniemcquillan1930 Год назад +12

    Hi guys. Great explore. Old hospitals of any department are very interesting to see architecturally. Old buildings of any kind are interesting to see actually. Thanks for the video 😀

  • @jacqueline7986
    @jacqueline7986 9 месяцев назад +4

    Beautiful Building You Explored, Great Job Guys,Love The Architecture Brings The Sun In, Loved The Stain Glass Windows 😊❤

  • @paulashepherd7223
    @paulashepherd7223 Год назад +7

    In leeds they don't have any spaces for mental health patients so there sending them to Scotland instead. It is really bad not enough money is given to the NHS to provide better care for people with mental illness. Shocking this day and age that we are forgotten about.

  • @yellowbearanimations
    @yellowbearanimations 9 месяцев назад +4

    I’m shocked at how well preserved it is inside

  • @richardmeftah2569
    @richardmeftah2569 7 месяцев назад +5

    That was a brilliant video.
    Really respectful of the property and very informative too. Nicely done. 👍🏼

  • @forevxrlost
    @forevxrlost 9 месяцев назад +4

    insanely clean filming and exposure choice throughout. thumbnail goes crazy too

    • @hobouk3871
      @hobouk3871 5 месяцев назад

      "insanely clean" Interesting choice of words for this video.

  • @Teaandabuscut
    @Teaandabuscut 9 месяцев назад +4

    There was one in bromsgrove worcestershire called Barnsley hall, I explored when I was a kid.. it’s been knocked down now and turned into houses.. but the main entrance and unmarked graves are still there.

  • @paulknight532
    @paulknight532 Год назад +7

    Just subscribed, been enjoying your videos for a while and this was a really great explore. I've always been interested in this area of social history, I live near the sites of two former asylums in Birmingham (Hollymoor and Rubery Hill) so this made it even more fascinating for me. I like that you remembered the horrors and mistakes of the past as this should never be forgotten, thankfully things are a lot better these days as we are more educated and enlightened in mental health issues.

    • @Urbandoned
      @Urbandoned  Год назад +1

      Thanks for clicking the button. It is good that things have drastically improved, in terms of mental health treatment. Still progression to be made!

  • @lizzapaolia959
    @lizzapaolia959 7 месяцев назад +3

    Excellent video. Thank you for sharing 🙏

  • @bobbythomas200420032
    @bobbythomas200420032 Год назад +2

    HI guys another fantastic video and thank you for making it. The filming and the commentary was excellent.

  • @hobouk3871
    @hobouk3871 5 месяцев назад +3

    I suffer from severe Social and General Anxiety aswell as having a Neurological problem. Back in the early days i probrably would have been committed because of my problems but thankfully not by todays standards.

  • @jimfaust6342
    @jimfaust6342 7 месяцев назад +3

    Awesome video. :) Sub earned. Lol😅 btw I love abandoned asylums and malls and airports and amusement parks

  • @TheTaz1999
    @TheTaz1999 Год назад +4

    Was a beautiful building with a terrible history,,, the so many lost souls that wondered those corridors now long dead,, they the lucky ones.

  • @derrenleepoole
    @derrenleepoole Год назад +4

    Another quality explore lads.

  • @BoxxerBeat
    @BoxxerBeat Год назад +24

    The whole hospital isn't abandoned. There are still about 100 or so patients there who now complain about feeling unsafe because there's random people flying drones and recording them and creeping through the hospital when they might be going out for a walk.

    • @shortynalie
      @shortynalie 6 месяцев назад +3

      Lies- this place is closed down.

    • @BoxxerBeat
      @BoxxerBeat 6 месяцев назад +3

      Part of it was, there's still 2 wards, a pharmacy, OT, physio and a cafe in that main hospital building. It's not all closed down.

  • @michailokeefeMooMoo
    @michailokeefeMooMoo Год назад +3

    Another amazing building and video guys. Wish it was a bit longer video

  • @priestessmikokikyo77
    @priestessmikokikyo77 9 месяцев назад +5

    We must never forget the victims of the old asylums and the barbaric treatment they underwent, these were lost souls wanting help yet treated like animals for sadistic means. A tragic representation of lunesy would be the fictional R.M.Renfield from Bram Stokers novel Dracula. God heartbreaking!

  • @petergeorgedirector4
    @petergeorgedirector4 Год назад +242

    Asylums were never more needed than now. So-called 'Care in the community' simply isn't working and dangerous people who cannot function in normal life are committing thousands of violent crimes and not being cared for properly. These places must never, never permit any cruelty, but like it or not they ARE vital for humanity to function and to ensure comprehensive care of the mentally ill.

    • @noreenreynolds6516
      @noreenreynolds6516 Год назад +21

      Especially in the USA

    • @tsimeone
      @tsimeone Год назад +25

      Ah I get it, but every Tom Dick and Harry was locked up in one. Blimey I'd have been in one for epilepsy, and various mental illnesses that I have.
      But I also do agree with you, certain circumstances of course. But then is it really right to lock people up like that?
      The care in the community thing is great and all, IF it's carried out the right way. Sadly it's failed under successive governments.

    • @kristensorensen2219
      @kristensorensen2219 Год назад +9

      No cruelty🤔? Of course none of that happens in prison; dream on!!

    • @Mindsi
      @Mindsi Год назад

      But who will pay?

    • @benlambley7171
      @benlambley7171 Год назад +7

      You are so right look at the mess now care in the community just isn’t working and people are being neglected. There are still psychiatric facilities closing all over the country to very worrying.

  • @carolynhollingworth5905
    @carolynhollingworth5905 Год назад

    Great explore.x

  • @paulzimmerman6058
    @paulzimmerman6058 Год назад +3

    I just watched a proper people video, and an asylum in New jersey had the same exact tile floor design.

  • @hobbyvollychannel2446
    @hobbyvollychannel2446 Год назад +1

    i see some rooms still look good and clean though they have been negleted,,thank you for this channel to bring me to other experience life

  • @dianag967
    @dianag967 10 месяцев назад +4

    it is so sad, alot of these people don't look like they're mentally ill, more like elderly sick people that need care because they're not able to care for themselves , and they just threw them in there as if they were mentally ill. so sad . the place is so interesting, just thinking of all those people that one day walked through those hallways . thanks for sharing. love watching

  • @moniquesilverans3842
    @moniquesilverans3842 Месяц назад +2

    C'est encore plus terrible maintenant car les personnes au mental dérangé se trouvent souvent dans la rue sans soins et abandonnés de tous, au moins dans l'hôpital ils avaient un lit, des repas et des soins

  • @gabrielv.4358
    @gabrielv.4358 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome!!!

  • @markramsay6399
    @markramsay6399 Год назад +2

    Fabulous video as always. In the closing sequence, is that one of you flying a drone? I assume you must be to get the high altitude footage. Cheers, Mark.

  • @MrSkunky2009
    @MrSkunky2009 Год назад

    This is such an important insight...

  • @406estate
    @406estate Год назад +14

    Having worked in a mental health hospital for 11 years it’s definitely not for the faint hearted……

    • @ajf369
      @ajf369 Год назад +4

      What made you stay for 11 years? X

    • @PROPHETS-BAIN
      @PROPHETS-BAIN 9 месяцев назад +8

      I've visited a friend in a mental hospital and a few of the nurses were absolutely as sick as some of the patients, they did some nasty things like hide the TV powercable , stole cigarettes from the patients, mocked patients, I called them out in front of my friend and couple of other patients for repeatedly hiding the TV power cable as I saw them do it one day I was there .

    • @stephaniestone4737
      @stephaniestone4737 3 месяца назад +1

      @@PROPHETS-BAINimagine what they did without a visitor to be witness.

  • @frasermathers2287
    @frasermathers2287 Год назад +13

    Great video guys and an amazing set of buildings just going to waste. I am not a believer of ghosts, but its at time like this I wished there were and we could have a chat with them, although in this case it may be more of a nightmare conversation. Thanks as always lads.

  • @herschell64
    @herschell64 2 месяца назад +1

    I went with a friend of mine to visit one of her friends in these places, I really didn't like the feeling you got inside there, just creepy and upsetting, never want to set foot in one again whether operating or abandoned

  • @stolendiorr
    @stolendiorr Год назад +4

    I need to find a group of friends in the USA who would be interested in doing this sort of exploration. I’m really interested in exploration of abandoned buildings especially Asylums.

    • @Urbandoned
      @Urbandoned  Год назад

      There is a large community in the USA, probably some forums or social media where you can find others with the same interest

  • @elizabethspedding1975
    @elizabethspedding1975 Год назад

    Really interesting ❤

  • @edski1999
    @edski1999 10 месяцев назад +4

    Would like to see more rooms instead of mostly hallways please!

  • @karenflanagan1961
    @karenflanagan1961 Год назад +4

    Yeah alot of the building in total looks like it could be refurbished and used again to bad for the vandalism not surprising they see its over unfortunately.

  • @Dante_maycry
    @Dante_maycry 2 месяца назад

    FINALLY BRO SPECIAL ENTERTAIMENT!

  • @LugaresOlvidados
    @LugaresOlvidados Год назад

    Espectacular.

  • @greywebs1944
    @greywebs1944 Год назад

    Love the chequered flooring

  • @2wml
    @2wml 10 месяцев назад +3

    i knew mental hospitals were absolute shit considering ive been to 5 different ones but i never thought about how CRUEL the staff actually were back then

    • @Velo1010
      @Velo1010 28 дней назад +1

      I was in one for writing a suicide note that I was probably going to carry out. Mine was a nice place that also took patients in for drug and alcohol abuse. It’s still open in a very busy area (not secluded like some envision) and nice area. I never witnessed anything that was not ordinary. They did give me a drug (prescription) once that made me extremely tired. The next time they asked me to take it I told them “hell no!” They said okay.

  • @FrostyGaming8394
    @FrostyGaming8394 Год назад +3

    Hi Alistar how are you doing? Great video you have uploaded again as always this place is an absolute tip it needs to be cleared out completely the outside I mean asylums and metal hospitals are nasty places to go to back in the olden times as people got abused too which meant the final nail in the wall was out and the places had to close hope your having a good day so far Alistar and keep up the amazing content as always 👍

    • @Urbandoned
      @Urbandoned  Год назад +3

      I'm good! Thank you very much for the nice words, and yes, it is always saddening to walk the halls of an asylum with the past circumstances in mind.

  • @markabrahamhumphreysdani-wy7qe

    Thankyou

  • @deniseshephard3347
    @deniseshephard3347 27 дней назад

    Thank you for this moving video it says a lot about the NHS as a whole and how it is struggling now a beautiful building that could of still been used but it isnt I have been a inpatient many times in psychratic units because I have complex mental health conditions and they were struggeling then why did others have to destroy such a beautiful building with a horrific past

  • @terrysmith4290
    @terrysmith4290 9 месяцев назад +1

    Looks very similar to hellingly asylum east Sussex but been torn down for housing good content

  • @TLRing
    @TLRing 7 месяцев назад

    This place has to be one of the largest I've seen anyone explore. Its HUGE!!

  • @paulhough5143
    @paulhough5143 2 месяца назад +1

    Hello good video of the hospital and also what year did it get abandoned in and what was the reason for.

  • @melodyho0506
    @melodyho0506 7 месяцев назад

    Hi! Was this filmed in the asylum this year? Cheers

  • @leoancherani2223
    @leoancherani2223 28 дней назад

    Hello👋 I just subscribed to your channel today, I also just gave you a like.👍👌

  • @Ciaothecat
    @Ciaothecat Год назад +1

    Almost looks like the one in Greater Manchester and it is still a live hospital but for staff use only, paitients are in modern buildings.

  • @cincin9509
    @cincin9509 10 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of the old mental hospitals were originally TB Asylums. Sunlight was thought to help. That’s why hallways of windows.

    • @littlewink7941
      @littlewink7941 5 месяцев назад

      Not true,none of the Victorian asylums were former TB 'asylums.

  • @terrydaniel-qm9mh
    @terrydaniel-qm9mh 23 часа назад

    Many many normal people have been killed .. resulting from so called ( care in the community) the institutions are needed to facilitate their safety but more importantly the safety of society so that it can function properly.

  • @andrewcollins8774
    @andrewcollins8774 Год назад +16

    Terrible shame they have let that building go to such a mess. We need mental health hospitals. More so now than years ago. Could you please tell me the date it was opened and closed if you have those details thanks.

  • @DRSEXPLORING
    @DRSEXPLORING 2 месяца назад

    I was thinking of going there been told there is no access inside anymore

  • @kspeed419
    @kspeed419 9 месяцев назад

    Did i just find a UK version of The Proper People?! Sure hope so!

  • @GMT439
    @GMT439 8 месяцев назад

    We are going back to this system right now. I can see it coming, Give it a decade or so..

  • @michailokeefeMooMoo
    @michailokeefeMooMoo Год назад

    I would be tempted too turn on all the light on ready for the night shift too see lol

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    sir what street is this hospital located at my parents want two know.

  • @marcel1813
    @marcel1813 10 месяцев назад

    Mega Schönheit Danke für das zeigen 👍👍👍

  • @shirleydrury5565
    @shirleydrury5565 День назад

    Sick😢😢😢

  • @konradblades93
    @konradblades93 11 месяцев назад +4

    A good video however since there is a section of this site which is still operating as a Mental Hospital. Why didn't you cooperate with them in the making of this film? They may have said no but they may also very likely have said yes and being quite happy to answer your questions about the sites history. Just seems to me like you've done the undercover 'Urbex' route purely for dramatic effect.

  • @tamarahenderson5241
    @tamarahenderson5241 Год назад

    Love

  • @gailspaw5521
    @gailspaw5521 8 месяцев назад

    Sad😢

  • @meepthirteen
    @meepthirteen 6 месяцев назад

    Intriguing…

  • @walking_exploring_urbex
    @walking_exploring_urbex 4 месяца назад

    It's definately not a Victorian Asylum as it was opened in 1932. The architect George Thomas Hine however was ;) 🙏

  • @warningsigns4526
    @warningsigns4526 8 месяцев назад +1

    I bet the people here were the most sane ones alive at the time and challenged the authority keeping them in bondage.

    • @littlewink7941
      @littlewink7941 5 месяцев назад

      Do you mean staff or patients. Patients obviously were not in any form of bondage.

  • @Hifi1927
    @Hifi1927 Год назад +3

    Very interesting is this Whitchurch hospital ?

  • @dannywalsh840
    @dannywalsh840 8 месяцев назад

    The chequered floor reminds me of Terminator 2

  • @darkmagician9916
    @darkmagician9916 Год назад +2

    They tried something called The Assertive outreach team it failed miserably, the so called nurses or what ever they were ment to be called was only with the patients about half an hour then that was it leaving the partners to continue to struggle on

  • @gaztaylor4178
    @gaztaylor4178 5 месяцев назад

    They could do sooo much with that place like a hmo or apartment's someone needs to rescue that place before the elements take over and ruin it.

  • @A_Bvgzi
    @A_Bvgzi 8 месяцев назад

    It looks like the hospital I was in last year...

  • @59patrickw
    @59patrickw Год назад

    The horror of the past we can not change but learn from and not repeat, but what horror would the patients of got at home a lot worse then been in the hospital
    the horror of today we can change but do we till its to late

  • @katieh9986
    @katieh9986 8 месяцев назад

    Great video - obviously hasn't been closed for long. Its also not much of an 'asylum' but more a pretty modern psychiatric hospital 😏

  • @electroshed
    @electroshed Год назад +1

    Fab video guys! What a place, those corridors and floors reminded me of the original Half Life PC game! ..also... First! 🤣

  • @DataSpook
    @DataSpook 8 месяцев назад

    The most interesting parts which are the rooms and documents are not shown. 😞

  • @justaboutmanaginguk5002
    @justaboutmanaginguk5002 9 месяцев назад

    10:40 how’d you lose bed wheels??

  • @RichieRouge206
    @RichieRouge206 11 месяцев назад

    I managed to explore the mental asylum at Denbigh up here near me in North Wales. An utterly vast, fascinating and incredibly creepy place. I’ve not experienced such a place since. Fantastic explore of another truly amazing building. They should never have introduced Care In The Community. It does not work and we need places like this more than ever now I’m very sad to say

  • @truth.hurts...
    @truth.hurts... 2 месяца назад

    There's one in raddlet you need to vist

  • @wandaclark9252
    @wandaclark9252 4 месяца назад +1

    Nursing homes are full of them

  • @dollygore4034
    @dollygore4034 Месяц назад

    This asylum reminds me of Franbow for some of lol

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    this hospital class opened in 1981.

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    including my teacher two sir.

  • @k20aa
    @k20aa Год назад +4

    Why do they let these places Rot . Great vids Guys 👍👍

    • @kristensorensen2219
      @kristensorensen2219 Год назад

      Asbestos! Otherwise these could be prisons.🤷

    • @Teaandabuscut
      @Teaandabuscut 9 месяцев назад

      Sadly with the asbestos and the size it would cost so much to tear it down.. though they should.. land is needed for homes.

  • @Omega9935
    @Omega9935 9 месяцев назад

    There isn't horror in this video, that is sad this building is closed.

  • @user-ox9lo2nj9q
    @user-ox9lo2nj9q 2 месяца назад

    Such a bog place overcrowded? Why were there so many ppl needing stay in a mental hospital. People with ptsd and similar conditions who were misunderstood and could be treated outside were all probably drugged and stuffed in a place where they wouldn't be a bother. 😢 sad

  • @ChickasawBrave
    @ChickasawBrave 9 месяцев назад

    that's how it was at a former state hospital here in Oregon Dammasch State Hospital its been closed for years i had family in there that either disappeared our died a weird death our got raped and had a kid they never met

  • @Nick_Smith1970
    @Nick_Smith1970 Год назад

    Corridors like Terminator 2. Same floor. 😎💀

    • @PROPHETS-BAIN
      @PROPHETS-BAIN 9 месяцев назад

      Exactly what I 1st though ha

  • @nadinearnold8235
    @nadinearnold8235 Год назад

    They still do those trees in mh units

  • @Duncan_1971
    @Duncan_1971 16 дней назад

    That place looks like Nova Prospekt

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    and they even have blinds in there hospital two class from the 1981s.

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    very very old old hospital in the 1950s class.

  • @chastityduarte1770
    @chastityduarte1770 Год назад

    what street is your guys hospital located at my parents want two know what street because they want two take pictures of your hospital.