Cyrus--the title of the page, "Auge", is the German word for "eye", so it's not surprising to see a diagram of an eye there too... I'm guessing maybe the whole page is about eyes, though I lack the mad translating skillz to verify.
I love the way the chairs are grouped. The one yellow one looks directly at the others, with a second yellow kind of hovering at its side like an assistant sitting there with the doctor/nurse talking to the patients. And the rest of the chairs facing those, or looking off to one side, like a group of patients, some of them distracted by whatever is off right of frame (their left)... It's like Hikarino says, it tells a story.
One could do a vertical wallpaper, with black (or decorated, or whatever) bars on either side to fill it out to the required (horizontal) dimensions... The width of the photograph need not be the width of the screen.
I think the nearest mirror/polished steel/whatever is just reflecting the peeling on the wall opposite it, not peeling itself. It's intriguing to think of them as two-way mirrors, though, but I've got no basis for that, just a wild imagination. :)
My guess would be patient dormitories. I could swear I've seen big rooms with similar dividers labeled as such elsewhere on the site (though maybe I'm wrong).
Re: infant restraint, I know swaddling often soothes very young babies, and my own daughter (four months old) appears much more comfortable sleeping strapped into her infant car seat than lying in her crib. Remember that before birth they're nice and comfy in mama's womb where there's no extra space--the big wide world is *frighteningly* big and wide and they're not used to it at all. Bundling them up tightly reassures them by reproducing the tight-quarters feeling of the womb. (At least, this was how it was explained to me.) IIRC the papoose thing is very similar, with the baby wrapped tightly.
That said, I think that usually applies to babies a bit younger than the one in the picture, and I'm not 100% sure what would be so happy-making about having his/her arms strapped down like that, held out to the sides.
I've heard that one, Orchid Lunar--an old folk tale about a woman who was buried in her wedding dress, and at some point grave robbers dug her up and stole the dress to sell for good money. The dress gets sold to a new bride (not by the crooks themselves, but by a third party who bought it from them), who keels over on her wedding day. She is found to have been died of formaldehyde poisoning; embalming fluid remaining on the dress seeped into her system through her skin. They discover this after her grieving husband has already given away or sold the dress, unable to bear having such a reminder around, of course, so it goes on to kill more brides.
I think it's an unlikely tale at best, but it is entertaining. :)
I think it's the cupola that does it. You don't normally expect to see that sort of decorations on buildings this... short. Usually they're at least two floors up, or on a space that's the equivalent of that, at least.
Am I missing something? This looks like the remains of a standard sort of hospital bed with rails to me. So... They're creepy because people slept in them?
Lynne, I just wanted to say thank you for taking the time to explain stuff like this to us. I've learned so much about institutions from reading your comments--they're always interesting to read and sometimes (as here) make me think about the whole situation in a different light.
Not sure it's a toilet... The base looks kind of like one, but it's a bit on the large side, and there's a faucet above it. I'd guess it's another sink--seems like I vaguely recall seeing something like that in the morgue in another gallery, although I could be misremembering.
I guess it just bothers me that people are so eager to ignore perfectly reasonable mundane explanations for what they see just because they want to see something spooky. (And with that I'll drop the subject because you're right, this isn't a message board. Sorry, Motts.)