5,961 Comments for Kings Park Psychiatric Center

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First, cup your hand under the soap dispenser-light. Then push upwards. Push up on the little thing sticking out of the bottom, and the soap comes out into your hand. In a perfect world, the light would also then turn on..... ;)
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what kind of camera do you shoot with, these pictures are amazing.
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me and my friendsw were in this halway just a few days ago it was awesome.
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I wonder what the square cement foundation looking thing on the left is / was?
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Wow, Nurse that worked here! Very cool info. What els can you tell us? Was Bld 22 the one that had the courtyard incloser built inthe 80's for a word of younger Psyc patiants?

I bet you have alot of stories!
=D
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There are tours !? Please someone tell me if this is true !

=D
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I like this shot, it just goes to show that mother nature eventually will win and take over as seen in this photo, amazing!!
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Silent Hill
This site is the stuff !!
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What a lovely shade of flesh!
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Great pic! Reminds me of a Nightmare.
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wow Karen, that is some disturbing information, all of those things really happened, and you only worked there 2 years, that is terrible :-(
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In one of the buildings we found pieces of a rabbit that had been laid out almost like it was sacraficed...my guess, someone put the cat in there, but it was probably a kid, after the buildings had closed...future serial killers...
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Yep definetely a coffee/staff room. Which isn't sayin much.. LOL I can still see the small table in the far rite corner. Some of the Staff coffee rooms had windows that viewd the Day rooms so you could see the patients. At least building 22 did on ward 226.. But it was sooooo long ago.
goes to show how time really changes things...... These builiding didn't look like this at all when i worked there the last two years before they closed down.
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This looks like one of the rooms we used to put patients in when they we on 1 to 1's.. The patient was put in a sheet restraint or jacked and tied down. A staff memeber would have to sit in the room with them by the door and watch them. Patients in Sheet restraints or jackets were to be released at specific intervals to check circulation and vs and make sure they were ok. The patient was usually so drugged up, that by the time they were in the restraint for 15 mins they were usually asleep and didn't need it any more..... So so sad what these patients were put through!