Comments
Intricity

pegasus64

That is why it is known as the 'craftsman" era...

Location: Gentzrode  Gallery: Kahlen Berge

Weeds

pegasus64

The tapestry brickwork is amazing. There really aren't the artisans out there anymore that can do this.

Location: Gentzrode  Gallery: Kahlen Berge

Rotten Through

Pegasus64

Shame that all that beauty and practicality have to go to waste. Was it plaster over brick?

Location: Gentzrode  Gallery: Kahlen Berge

Reveal

pegasus64

When I first started my job 15 years ago, they used glass jars. Now only disposable ones.

Location: Rathen State Hospital  Gallery: Steam

Stryker Turning Frame

pegasus64

It was revolutionary in the treatement of people who were restrained for whatever reason, to keep turning them to prevent bed sores. They used them in acute care hospitals for people with spinal injuries...fastening them to the bed frame and turning them periodically to prevent skin shears and bed sores by redistributing pressure.

Location: Rathen State Hospital  Gallery: Steam

Shapes

pegasus64

leg orthotics would be my guess...

Location: Fuller State School and Hospital  Gallery: Chop Shop

Eating

pegasus64

This may have been in the early stages of realization that some developmentally disabled people were actually "trainable". My cousin had brain damage from a high fever and the doctor told my Aunt that she could just go home and leave her son there and the doctor would put him away for her...she didn't need to worry herself over him. She did take him home and later in life after my aunt died, he was capable of living in a group home because she chose to keep him home and teach him whatever he could learn.

Location: Fuller State School and Hospital  Gallery: Chop Shop

Rows

pegasus64

This must have been before there was such a seperation of church and state...

Location: Fuller State School and Hospital  Gallery: Chop Shop

Stopped

pegasus64

Sometimes some of the racing or sports wheelchairs are smaller to allow for more speed and agility.

Location: Fuller State School and Hospital  Gallery: Chop Shop

Trap

pegasus64

Even if there are no bugs, (that and the fact that I live in a tiny town that has nothing like this around) I guess I am just going to have live vicariously through you! Maybe you can work on the channeling thing? Just a thought...If there are ghosts anywhere these would be the places for them.

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Unit

pegasus64

Looks like one of the video games my kids had where you had to run around this old plant stealing flags and shooting people!

Location: Westport Generating Station  Gallery: Trudge

Framed

pegasus64

Totally Sci-FI...

Location: Westport Generating Station  Gallery: Trudge

Duotone

pegasus64

OMG...just realized I have been coming to this site...and telling people about it and posting on facebook about for over 2 years!

Location: Valmea Convent  Gallery: Tangled

Rehab

pegasus64

Sorry you have a such a negative view Gordon. There is a lot more involved with recovery-based treatment than a bottle of pills. We can all be glad that mental health treatment has come a long way from One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest.

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Hydro

pegasus64

You are welcome!

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Trap

pegasus64

Yes, Mr. Motts...because the door might shut, or the floor not be as solid in there as it is in the hall, or the ceiling might collapse or what if you start channeling the person that lived there? Or is it that you get their perspective for your pictures? Anyway, I would love to do what you do only I don't like bugs, weeds, heat, humidity, cold, mold or wind.

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Perpendicular

pegasus64

Blue and green were found to be calming, but also cause depression. Red causes aggitation, and yellow cheers people up...at first, then it becomes agitating. Orange causes hunger cravings, white is sterile, but also cold. They study and study color, but the reactions are different depending on time exposed, hue, and even meds people are on.

Location: Norwich State Hospital  Gallery: The Old

Recommended Treatment

pegasus64

Thank God we don't live in that era of "One Flew Over the Cukoos Nest". Residents may still be resistive to treatment, but they are involved in their recovery. ECT can be beneficial, even today, for some. I have seen it make a non-functional person functional.

Location: Norwich State Hospital  Gallery: The Old

Nederland

pegasus64

The tiles on wall don't look like the regular subway tile, they look smaller, and the freize on the top is great. Where have all these craftsmen gone?

Location: Norwich State Hospital  Gallery: The Old

Split Apart

pegasus64

I can't figure out if it looks like a drunken, lonely chair or something that is inherently evil...

Location: Norwich State Hospital  Gallery: The Old

Softly

pegasus64

No erica...I think you are right, it is in a different gallery...look at the trees...they look the same as the picture I saved as my desktop here at work. There was a bedside table in that shot. Residents usually didn't have rooms, they had wards, so this could have been part of a resident's ward.

Location: Norwich State Hospital  Gallery: The Old

Relaxation

pegasus64

Were those like side-lights on the door or did they retro-fit a single door into what used to be a double door?

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Terrain

pegasus64

Looks like a hallway more than a room. There is a handrail, and they usually aren't in rooms. Amazing that the glass panes in the door are still in tact!

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

Trap

pegasus64

Mr. Motts...it appears that a lot of times you are in these rooms photographing out...isn't that a little nerve wracking?

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness

An Out

pegasus64

Hmmm...wonder why there is only a door handle on the top door?

Location: Rochester State Hospital  Gallery: Drifts of Whiteness