Comments

wrote:
it always amazes me when I look at those I-beams, how they warped from the fire. it must have been thousands of degrees
wrote:
Yes Madman those would be from me. HA! FAGGOTRY! GD!
wrote:
Wow, its ashame all that craftsmanship could just go to waste. I'm taking a geuss that ocular could mean "eye" or teh "eye of"
wrote:
yo wat building is this in cuz i go in this one building all the time and i can never find the auditorium...get back to me at MAYFAIRTOM@AOL,COM
wrote:
Thank you for taking me to these places.
wrote:
How about the spelling errors painted on the wall !
wrote:
Beautiful! Just plain beutiful.
wrote:
Perfect shot. I doubt mine would have came out like that.
wrote:
I just recently went to Glenndale hospital last sunday. Instead of checking out the adult section again we went to the childerens section, I found out that the childerens section had a smaller theater. I came to the idea that the childeren would practice plays and what not at their part of the hospital and then would go over to the adult section and perform for the adults. I could be wrong but thats what i think at least.
wrote:
I knew someone would know, thanks for the interesting info SinNombre!
wrote:
Hah, sometimes I catch myself talking in prose when going through my photos, very embarrassing.
wrote:
Yeah, it was probably used for special events, but I wonder if the patients saw this room at all, especially after the place became a psychiatric institute. It was most likely an employee dining room when something else wasn't going on.
wrote:
That's just Lanky...
wrote:
No, definitely not used for Cheerios. In my lab, we use one in the tissue culture hood to provide suction for an aspirator flask. Most modern laboratories have "in house" suction available, so it's not surprising that one of these portable vacuum pumps would be found in an older abandoned medical/laboratory facility.
wrote:
Such a poet :-)