Is the Ypsilanti Mental Institution Still Standing?

Question by Amriel: is the Ypsilanti mental institution still standing?
is it still standing? i mean would we be able to get in? if not, is their any other abandoned mental institutions that are still standing and that are open to the public?

Best answer:

Answer by ranunculusviridis
Ypsilanti State Hospital
Ypsilanti, Michigan

Established around the 1930s southwest of Ypsilanti, Michigan. Closed in 1992, it has last housed the “Center of Forensic Psychiatry”. Most of it has been demolished during 2001, and the rest is expected to be gone by 2003.

Ypsilanti (with picture) http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~asylums/

Others:

Afflicted: 11 Abandoned American Hospitals and Asylums “Open” for Exploration

FEATURED — BY RACHEL GREENBERG ON JULY 17, 2010 AT 10:00 AM

With some of the most disturbing and tragic histories of any buildings in the US, asylums and hospitals are way beyond creepy. Many of them were built in the late 1800s, when “mental illnesses” (such as masturbation, menopause, and teenage rebellion) were considered dangerous enough to lock someone in an asylum. A pain-inflicting misunderstanding of mental illness combined with a chronic mistreatment of its sufferers meant that many people were never released and spent the remainder of their lives in these horrible institutions.

In addition to asylums, many sanatoriums were constructed around this time to care for the poor and very sick. Utilizing radical treatments that were incredibly painful yet ineffective, early hospitals often created more suffering than good for the inflicted. To make matters worse, infectious outbreaks forced patients to be quarantined from the rest of society, further isolating them.

After decades of overcrowding in both asylums and sanatoriums, the invention of antibiotics and behavioral drugs, and an evolving understanding of mental illness rendered these massive compounds obsolete. Although most have been torn down, a few still remain standing. Abandoned for years – even decades – these remaining hospitals are deteriorating, rotting, and are reportedly haunted.

Although these spots may be spine-chillingly eerie and seem rife for exploration, be forewarned. Many of the buildings have yet to be torn down because they contain loads of asbestos, and as their condition deteriorates, this toxic insulation is being exposed. Due to wannabe explorers, local law enforcement monitors these buildings heavily, since they are mostly on state-owned land.

If you decide the risk is worth the reward, we didn’t send ya.

(MY NOTE: This website gives very detailed and eerie descriptions of each of these hospitals and asylums. There are several pictures of each one. You should find it to be an interesting study!)

1. Henryton State Hospital, Marriottsville, Maryland

2. New Jersey State Lunatic Asylum/Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital, Morris Plains, New Jersey

3. Santa Fe Railroad Hospital/Linda Vista Community Hospital, Los Angeles, California

4. Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum/ Weston State Hospital, Weston, West Virginia USA

5. Overbrook Insane Asylum/Essex County Hospital, Cedar Grove, New Jersey

6. Renwick Smallpox Hospital, Roosevelt Island, New York, USA

7. Old Mercy Hospital, Liberty, Texas

8. Kings Park Psychiatric Center, Long Island, NY

9. Waverly Hills Sanatorium, Louisville, KY

10. Athens Lunatic Asylum/The Ridges, Athens, Ohio

11: BONUS – Byberry Mental Hospital, Philadelphia, PA

Give your answer to this question below!

 

Sharp rise in opioid drugs prescribed for non-cancer pain, reports study in

Filed under: drug treatment centers in pa

Dr Alexander comments, “There is an epidemic of prescription opioid addiction and abuse in the United States, and we felt it was important to examine whether or not this epidemic has coincided with improved identification and treatment of pain.” Opioid …
Read more on Toronto NewsFIX

 

Paper's review of Pa. veterans' courts raises questions about rules, participants

Filed under: drug treatment centers in pa

Allegheny County Veterans Court accepts violent criminals that other programs routinely reject, such as arsonists, drug dealers and domestic-abuse defendants. The Trib found a dozen defendants who committed crimes here and in other states while in the …
Read more on The Republic