Comments

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Coplan, if you need a guide, I'll take you two through. Email me at radical_ed@yahoo.com if you want to chat about Byberry.
Old indeed!
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I would highly doubt anyone died in the morgue. For certain dead bodies were stored there. I am against graffiti myself, but by the previous post's logic we shouldn't ever discard even old ambulances.
OK Mathue, looks as though NBC have moved it since I posted that link. From the main Feedroom screen, you need to select 'Video Vault' from the jumpbox in the top left-hand corner. Keep clicking the button marked 'More' until Pennhurst Parts 1, 2 & 3 appear down the left-hand side of the screen. At the moment the first segment is around number 40 but I suspect that it will drop further down the list as new items are added. Good luck!
Looks so wonderful. I want one! :O) Wonderful photo
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Yeah the tunnels and basements were pretty flooded and not very photogenic, so I don't have any photos down there except for the children's morgue.
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Another uninformative article: http://www.wpxi.com/news/5270348/detail.html
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comment to whoever made this page, ive seen all these places that you picture cept the underground tunnels, i was wondering if u had mpcsi of thsoe cuz that place seems to always be full of water...like the hole pciture is the entrance i believe and it looks like theres water all in it, but if u have tunnle pictures , post em
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~Me.....BRRRRING MEEE A SHRUBBERY!!!
My colour-theory teacher brought a box full of 60-70 year old bottles of medicine from the basement of a long un-unused pharmacy for the class to use in a painting assignment, there were many of them with fluid still intact. Varied all the way from mouth-water to fish-oil and various medicines for all kinds of now-non-existing diseases. Was both freaky, disgusting and extremely interesting.

One of the bottles had a curled up bat inside, I thought at first it was a mouse, but then a friend of mine screamed out as she noticed it had wings, ironically enough, the then empty bottle had once been filled with formaldehyde and the bat was very well preserved.
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To sit and to watch the beauty of the outside without worring about what is beyond the door is the question, not, "To be or not to be?"
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The light coming through the window in the closed door adds a lot to the composition, complimenting the main light in the main window while still contrasting darkness in the rest of the room
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I can see Abbott and Costello running across, from door to door, Frankenstein, or Dracula, chasing them.....dating myself here....
I must say being in an I.V. is not a pleasant experience, I found out this summer after a stomach infection left me dangerously dehydrated, thankfully my I.V. was made of plastic.
That red blotch on the first door instantly made me think "palm-print"... Found this site yesterday, and have just added it to my favourites, truly a fascinating site you have mr. Motts...