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Infiltration Forums > UE Photography > I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.(Viewed 3883 times)
EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
< on 8/20/2018 7:47 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Hospitals are an interesting genre of abandoned building. They are everywhere across the world, with a high concentration in the northeastern part of the United States. Thankfully thats exactly where I grew up. They come in many forms, with the state hospital/training schools generally being my favorite. They're usually big campuses with theaters, dorms, chapels, medical buildings, etc.... like little abandoned towns. This weekend I finally hit my 100th (and subsequently 101st) abandoned hospital, and with that I've made a list of my 15 favorites from the last decade. This isn't "the 15 greatest abandoned hospitals" by any means. Some of my favorite hospitals have been the ones people always dismiss. I just love the lawless nature of them, and the fun that comes along with it. So here are my 15 favorites, along with a few photos from each.



15. Hudson River Psychiatric Center (NY)



I didn't get to Hudson until 2012, long after the fire that took out the larger of the two wings of the Kirkbride. It was still almost completely clean of graffiti, and the layout of the campus is great. The old buildings are so wonderful architecturally, and since it was a NY state hospital it was decked out with tin ceilings, a theater, chapel, and dozens of buildings of various ages and styles. The most modern structure, the rec building, has a second auditorium, a gym, a pool, and a bowling alley. All of the buildings were very easy to access back then, and the security presence was minimal. The roof of the administration building was one of my favorite places to hang out. No matter which direction you looked there was something interesting to look at. Over the years the campus descended into chaos. Another large fire took out the central administration building of the Kirkbride in 2018, which im sure the shitty new owners didn't mind. I haven't been back in years, and my last few trips I left my camera behind.



Hudson River Psychiatric Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../with/19324747009/



14. "Nonchalance State Hospital"



I enjoy this campus purely for the architecture of the theater. That being said, there are a handful of cool old buildings peppered around the campus. When we first went we hadn't seen photos from the theater for a few years so we didnt know what to expect. Getting inside was such a thrill we wound up going back a few times before it got too popular for comfort. I'm sure ill be back on the campus soon though.



Nonchalance State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../with/32140086670/





13. "Crestmont Sanitorium & Orphan Asylum"



I found this funky cluster of buildings one day ages ago while killing time on google maps in high school. In the half decade or so that passed since I found it and was able to visit, I had never seen a photo nor heard anyone speak of the building. I had absolutely no idea what to expect. It turned out to be one of the coolest things ive ever found. It has still not been visited by many people, and I hope that continues. Most of the campus has been converted into other uses, but several large buildings remain empty.



Crestmont Sanatorium &amp; Orphan Asylum by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157663588278933



12. "Stainless State Hospital"



One of the first abandoned complexes I ever found was this one. It took me over 10 years of knowing it existed to get inside. Surprisingly, it wasnt a whole lot different then the photos promised it to be back in the mid 2000's. It had the best hydrotherapy room I've personally seen, a mortuary room with a table and a couple of 2 body refrigerators, medical equipment, all that stuff. I was always put off because it's always sealed up really well, and I've heard of so many people getting busted here and leaving with a summons. Fortunately we didn't have that experience. After having to rush through a different state hospital nearby we spent a good amount of time checking out the largest of the small campuses buildings.



Stainless State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157699486221075



11. Kings Park Psychiatric Center (NY)



Kings park may be a dump today, but back in 2012 it was still a decent place to a relatively new explorer. I had never seen such massive abandoned hospital buildings. Shortly after my first visit a wave of demolition came through campus, and ever since then I've only ever gone back to attend wild rooftop barbecue parties which involve all sorts of mayhem I cant even begin to describe. There aren't really any hospitals left that such an event can be pulled off in, so when its gone it will be the end of an era.



Quad roof by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../with/15510866031/



10. "Northern Regional Developmental Center"



I have a long personal history with this large complex of buildings. I grew up a few towns over from the center. Back in 2009 I was brought there by someone from my high school who claimed the place reminded him of the Overbrook hospital, which was a 45 building complex that i'll discuss later. What this campus wound up being at the time was a single empty doctors house on the edge of the property. Regardless, the group all walked up to go inside. Our ride didnt feel like going in so he stayed on the porch. We spent a short amount of time inside the house which was small and empty. The only cool thing in the house was a state police radio unit blinking away in the kitchen. A short time later two town police officers showed up since a neighbor called them. I saw the two of them walking around the house as we came down the staircase onto the first floor. We ran out of the building but they nabbed us a short time later. They called the state hospital police and searched us while they waited for the state guys to show up. They did, which just resulted in them cursing us out but letting us go. I wound up back on campus a number of times over the next 9 years. When I got my drivers license I rode through the still active campus, knowing that one day I would be able to have full run of the place. However, thanks to a shockingly on-point security team it wasnt until the campus was half gone that I made it to the actual hospital building. A few buildings still remain but are gutted and will be demolished any day.



Northern Regional Developmental Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Northern Regional Developmental Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../with/18896215959/



9. Riverside Isolation Hospital (NY)



The abandoned isolation hospital on North Brother Island is one of the most well known abandoned hospitals in the world thanks to the overpublication its received over the years. Thankfully due to its location in the Bronx's east river, it doesn't receive much foot traffic. Visiting the island without permission required a good deal of planning. We set off in a small vessel in the pre-dawn hours and landed on the island a short time later. We waited for the sun to rise, and spent hours wandering the island. It was something that I had really wanted to visit, but I didn't think I would ever make it to. Departing the island with a card full of photos was a serious personal accomplishment, probably my largest at the time.



Riverside Island Isolation Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Riverside Island Isolation Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157657863732408



8. "Archangel Medical Center"



This disused wing of a small city medical center was a surprise for me. I always knew it was whitewashed from the photos I saw, but I still tried to get inside one day in 2013. Back then the way inside was to pop into the basement on the active side and walk over to the abandoned section. On the way towards the old wing I was stopped by a huge, angry security guard. He brought me and my two companions back up to the front desk, where we pretended to be in the wrong hospital. Several years later I went back with one of my best friends while killing time before sneaking into an old theater in the city. We found a way inside and were amazed to find the modernization work had been stripped away, revealing the gorgeous trim work and tin ceilings. It also has the best hospital chapel ive ever seen. It was a private playground for a long time but eventually Instagram made it's way to the place and ruined it. Even still I spent many nights on the roof, having picnics with my girlfriend, even watching fireworks from up there one fourth of July. Redevelopment work started on the building in 2018. Its being made into a glass studio with lofts above.



Archangel Hospital Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Archangel Hospital Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157675315691892



7. Preakness Healthcare Center (NJ)



I'm sure most people who visited the place would be surprised to see this one in my top 10. When I first visited it in 2010 it was one of the coolest things I had seen. The lights were all on, there was a ton of equipment left, and nobody aside from the people I went with knew it was a thing. The power plant had a 4 body morgue fridge that was still running, and the rest of the building was left packed with evidence from its time as a county forensics lab. There was also a nurses building which was turned into a juvenile detention center. The small campus had so much to offer. After a few short months of disuse water worked its way inside the main hospital, absolutely destroying the building. The structure became so filled with mold by the time word got out that it became a joke in the NJ exploring community. But those of us who saw it clean will forever remember it as a decent place. It was demolished in 2015.



Preakness Healthcare Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Preakness Healthcare Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157647893320048



6. Jersey City Medical Center (NJ)



I only made one visit to Jersey City Medical, but even then it easily makes my top 10 list. The cluster of art deco towers had roughly 2 million square feet of abandoned hospital space. Thats no exaggeration. Each of the dozen main towers was at least 12 stories, with the tallest being 23 stories. I only made it into the Hague Maternity Hospital during the tail end of the campus restoration project, but the structure was amazing. After the restoration was complete, we went back to investigate the rooftops and renovation efforts. Both left us speechless. Great care was taken to restore the main lobbies and auditoriums inside each of the buildings. The project is now complete, making it one of the largest and most impressive renovation projects in American history.



Jersey City Medical Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Margaret Hague Maternity Ward by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../with/15581355751/



5. "Tintown State Hospital"



This place is just a whole other level of beautiful. Its a relatively untouched campus of buildings perched between a couple of prison complexes in one of the most wonderfully serene settings ive ever experienced. Unfortunately its not a "walk in" type place by any means. The first time I was on campus I had a state police officer following me around watching my every move until I left. We had to sneak onto the campus in the dark to even have a hope of making it inside. As we walked around the massive structure, we heard an engine and saw lights. One of the campus cops was doing a round. We quickly ducked into a mess of overgrowth and watched them slowly drive right past us. Thankfully they didnt notice us, and we were able to sneak inside after an exhausting search for an entrance. Each room in the hospital was more impressive than the last, and we spent hours inside.



Tintown State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Tintown State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Tintown State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157698546091351



4. Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital (NJ)



My buddys mom used to drop us off behind the massive Kirkbride building at the Greystone Park hospital . This was in 2009/2010, so I hadn't seen much other than the old county jail and hospital complexes which both bordered my small hometown. Greystone was a whole other monster. I made several trips over the years until they announced its demolition was starting. Alongside Preserve Greystone, some old friends and I fought as hard as we could to try and get the structure saved. My favorite memory was hanging a large banner off the roof of the administration building at sunrise to generate media buzz for a preservation rally we helped organize. That rally went on to draw hundreds of people from all across the country. None of it amounted to anything, as the building was completely demolished in 2015.



Greystone Psychiatric Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Greystone Psychiatric Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157648016301928



3. Rockland Psychiatric Center (NY)



Of all the large abandoned hospital complexes that used to exist around me, Rockland was definitely one of my favorites. Its probably the hospital I spent the most amount of time in behind Overbrook. The campus boasted a rec building with a beautiful auditorium and a bowling alley, a mortuary room with an autopsy table, seemingly endless empty dormitory buildings, and a comfortable tunnel system connecting the structures. It always felt like a place that was going to continue to naturally rot away forever. My first visit was back in 2012. It was the first half active campus I went to. I remember being so worried about accidently bumping into someone from the hospital in the tunnels or popping up inside some active building. Nothing like that ever happened though. Over the years it became more and more like Hudson for me, it was just a place to go and kill time with friends, usually after work. After 100 or so visits the state hospital police got fed up with us and started threatening arrest. I completely stopped going, and the campus was leveled in 2018.



Rockland Psychiatric Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Rockland Psychiatric Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Rockland Psychiatric Center by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157648269592710



2. "Salamander General Hospital"



I made many trips to this former medical center before I ever got inside. Even several years after it closed the building was still being used as storage. The security gaurd used once yelled at me for taking photos of the building from the sidewalk out front. I didnt really start trying to get inside until 2015 when I noticed the new plywood on the buildings. When we eventually got inside the place amazed everyone in our group, since we had never seen photos of it before. Our first few trips were made when there was still power running through the building, so we would just go at night and screw around. We found doctors coats one trip, so we wore them, took one of my favorite group shots, and proceeded to walk out and back to the cars still wearing the coats. Another fun trip was raiding the morgue with one of my friends who studied mortuary science. Being there with her made us truly appreciate just how stocked with cool items the room was. Eventually they cut the power, and Instagram found and flooded the place. After that it was still a fantastic place for us to just go hang out at night. I cant even count the amount of visits we made, but it was well over a dozen. I plan to make a proper post dedicated solely to this one when the time comes. Demolition started on the complex in 2018.



Salamander State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Salamander State Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Salamander General Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album: https://www.flickr.../72157665497094448



1. Essex County Overbrook Hospital (NJ)



Its hard to sum up in a paragraph how much Overbrook has meant to me over the years. I grew up in walking distance of it, so some of my earliest memories are of driving through the campus when it was still active. My buddies and I used to hang out in the long-abandoned buildings on Fairview Ave, and when they closed the hospital it became my playground. I had no idea that so many people were fascinated with exploring back then. I met more people through Overbrook than any other place, including my amazing girlfriend. I got my first trespassing summons here. When the property changed hands and security took over we made their nights so interesting. Whether it was the fireworks we set off (in responsible but hilarious places), the banner we hung from the roof, or the various absurd roadblocks we would construct along their routes during their naps, it was never a boring night for them. We crawled all over every square inch of the place before it was gone, to the extent that very few know the place as well as me and I'd challenge anyone who says they know it better. It got me through so many hard times in my life, and for that it will likely always be my favorite hospital. Demolition has been on and off since around 2009 but it was finally completed in 2018.



Overbrook by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Overbrook by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Overbrook by EsseXploreR, on Flickr



Album:

https://www.flickr.../72157648366313592



So that's it, my favorite 15 out of the first 100 hospitals I have been inside. Most of the others can be found on my Flickr page under albums. As you have read, most of these hospitals are no longer around. These structures are demolished every year, at a pace which seems to be picking up. New Jersey used to be littered with abandoned hospitals, but we are down to just a handful now. As more continue to close, I'll continue to seek them out and visit them. And hopefully within the next decade I can write about my favorite 15 from the next set of 100. Somehow, I just dont think they will compare to the first.



Thanks for reading!



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http://www.tfpnj.blogspot.com
Pearson location:
Chicagoland/Sometimes Austin
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 1 on 8/20/2018 8:02 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
I was at 'stainless' earlier this year. My camera died inside the building and I didn't get a single photo. The mere size of the place blew me away as it was my first northeast location coming from Texas. Not much was in there, and the famed iron lungs were gone, but man was it cool.



EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 2 on 8/20/2018 8:05 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by Pear
I was at 'stainless' earlier this year. My camera died inside the building and I didn't get a single photo. The mere size of the place blew me away as it was my first northeast location coming from Texas. Not much was in there, and the famed iron lungs were gone, but man was it cool.


Yeah they took them out a while ago. They were actually donated to a museum where one is on display.



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Pearson location:
Chicagoland/Sometimes Austin
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 3 on 8/20/2018 8:51 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by EsseXploreR


Yeah they took them out a while ago. They were actually donated to a museum where one is on display.


One is at Boston children's, that many pieces of history at risk of serious vandalism wasn't optimal. It's nice to hear that.



Vacant NJ location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 4 on 8/20/2018 10:19 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Smash The State Not Greystone!



Baldran location:
The Ira Bemis House
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 5 on 8/20/2018 10:45 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
This is a great rundown. It's too bad that a lot of these places no longer exist, or are so greatly degraded from what they were when you visited them in their prime.

It boggles my mind that you were able to explore one hundred abandoned hospitals in the northeast. I've been to seven. I really need to step up.



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blackhawk
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 6 on 8/20/2018 11:22 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
A bunch of beautiful stone cold keepers EsseXploreR
Much better than the other way of exploring hospitals...



Just when I thought I was out... they pulled me back in.
EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 7 on 8/20/2018 11:50 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by Baldran
This is a great rundown. It's too bad that a lot of these places no longer exist, or are so greatly degraded from what they were when you visited them in their prime.



Posted by blackhawk
A bunch of beautiful stone cold keepers EsseXploreR
Much better than the other way of exploring hospitals...


Much appreciated guys!

Posted by Baldran

It boggles my mind that you were able to explore one hundred abandoned hospitals in the northeast. I've been to seven. I really need to step up.



Well to be fair Ive been to hospitals in Ohio, North and South Carolina, Virginia, DC, and Maryland as well. So they're not all in the northeast. Just 85 or so of them!



https://www.flickr...62837453@N07/sets/

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AsylumGhost   |  | 
Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 8 on 8/21/2018 12:37 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
great set and commentary



mortifer location:
Orange County
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 9 on 8/21/2018 3:46 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Damn wish I could've been to #2, it looks amazing.



MisUnderstood! location:
SouthEast, Texas
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 10 on 8/21/2018 4:58 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Enjoyed North Brother Island so very much! Love the circular staircase and all your shots on your link. Out of my top 10 places i would like to visit this is in the top 5. Thanks so much for sharing ALL of your wonderful photos, but for me...Especially, this one



A place of Mystery is Always worth a curiosity trip!
EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 11 on 8/21/2018 2:45 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by AsylumGhost
great set and commentary


Thanks!

Posted by MisUnderstood!
Enjoyed North Brother Island so very much! Love the circular staircase and all your shots on your link. Out of my top 10 places i would like to visit this is in the top 5. Thanks so much for sharing ALL of your wonderful photos, but for me...Especially, this one


Thank you! That was one hell of a trip for sure.

Posted by mortifer
Damn wish I could've been to #2, it looks amazing.


It really was. Ive never been in a hospital that had so much left behind. They must have had a hell of a time throwing out everything that was still being stored inside there.

Posted by Vacant NJ
Smash The State Not Greystone!


^This guy remembers^

Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital by EsseXploreR, on Flickr

Hard to believe that was 3 years ago already.




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robdobi   |  |  | AIM Message | dobi.nu
Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 12 on 8/21/2018 3:08 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
norwich not making the top 15 = TERRIBLE LIST.

i feel like jersey city med is definitely a spot that was COMPLETELY overlooked during its time and nobody from the instagram era ever made it there.



dobi.nu / fullbleed.org - series 12 now available. / flickr / tumblr
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EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 13 on 8/21/2018 3:37 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by robdobi
norwich not making the top 15 = TERRIBLE LIST.

i feel like jersey city med is definitely a spot that was COMPLETELY overlooked during its time and nobody from the instagram era ever made it there.


Norwich was a beast of course, but I didn't get there until last year. After the main auditorium came down my interest waned. I still regret not going earlier, but there's nothing I can do about it now. Im sure if I had gone back in '09 or '10 it would be on here.

As for JCMC, I'm so glad none of the skidmark Insta kids made it. Place would have been way overdone.


[last edit 8/21/2018 3:47 PM by EsseXploreR - edited 2 times]

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mookster location:
Oxford, UK
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 14 on 8/21/2018 4:04 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Fantastic achievement and list. I've had the pleasure of exploring a few of those with you so I'm glad they featured in it!



Makeshift Mickey   |  | 
Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 15 on 8/21/2018 9:14 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Really awesome to see this detailed compilation of all your abandoned hospitals. #2 looked like quite the unique experience. I can't wait to get another opportunity to explore an abandoned hospital again.



Adv.Pack location:
Connecticut
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 16 on 8/22/2018 12:07 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Man sometimes I forget how many places are actually gone. A few of these would make my top 15 as well.



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Adv.Pack location:
Connecticut
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 17 on 8/22/2018 12:44 AM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by robdobi
norwich not making the top 15 = TERRIBLE LIST.



Yep I think Norwich would be my #1



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EsseXploreR location:
New Jersey
 
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Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 18 on 8/22/2018 3:21 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by mookster
Fantastic achievement and list. I've had the pleasure of exploring a few of those with you so I'm glad they featured in it!


Thanks bud! Im glad we got the chance to check them out too. Ya really never know when theyre going to take away another playground.

Posted by Adv.Pack
Man sometimes I forget how many places are actually gone. A few of these would make my top 15 as well.


It really is wild. We lose more and more ever year and it doesn't seem to be slowing down any time soon.



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robdobi   |  |  | AIM Message | dobi.nu
Re: I finally visited my 100th abandoned hospital. Here are my favorite 15.
<Reply # 19 on 8/23/2018 3:14 PM >
Posted on Forum: UER ForumQuote
Posted by EsseXploreR


Norwich was a beast of course, but I didn't get there until last year. After the main auditorium came down my interest waned. I still regret not going earlier, but there's nothing I can do about it now. Im sure if I had gone back in '09 or '10 it would be on here.

As for JCMC, I'm so glad none of the skidmark Insta kids made it. Place would have been way overdone.


ah for sure, i assumed you went back in the day. once the tunnels were imploded / theater came down everything changed.



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