k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>In late March and early April I was part of a team trying a case in federal court in Central Islip, a town in the middle of Long Island, New York. While there I noticed some extraordinary abandoned buildings and learned about the Central Islip Psychiatric Hospital, one of three large asylums on Long Island where patient-inmates from New York City were held from the 1890s through the 1990s. The asylum at Central Islip sprawled over 1,000 acres and, at its peak in the 1950s and 1960s, housed about 10,000 inmates. Much of it has been razed and converted to other uses including condominiums, a shopping mall, a commercial office park, baseball fields, and the courthouse where my trial was taking place. But a number of the asylum buildings remain. Converted to classrooms and dormitories, some form the core of the New York Institute of Technology's Central Islip campus. Others, often mixed among the NYIT buildings, are abandoned.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>The asylum buildings were beautifully constructed and have decayed with dignity. Photographically, decaying buildings are all about detail, and for me, that means an excuse to shoot medium format film in some of my vintage gear.<br /><br />My trial lasted almost four weeks, and was close enough to my home that I could return home for a night or two on weekends. After the first week when I noticed and researched the facility, I brought a Mamiya RB67 with 90mm and 50mm Sekor lenses. For the third week, I brought two vintage TLRs, a 1937 Zeiss-Ikon Ikoflex and a 1955 Yashicaflex. For the fourth week, I brought back the two TLRs plus an Olympus 35RC.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>The abandoned structure most obvious from the road passing through the facility is the former administrative headquarters. This was on a modest rise of land that made it the highest point on the asylum property.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>I have read that the Admin building roof was used to look out for German planes during World War II. It wouldn't have been much of a lookout position. Then again, German planes over Long Island weren't much of a threat.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>A striking thing about the abandoned asylum buildings is the way they have been allowed to decay without desecration. There is no graffiti and almost no litter. The grounds are heavily patrolled by local and NYIT police. They are nice to you if you are walking a dog, taking pictures or just looking around, but evidently quick to run off any groups of kids or other loiterers who might be up to no good.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>I threw whatever film I had on hand into my bag for the five or six trips that I made to the facility; my mine criteria was to use the most out-of-date stuff first. This resulted in a mix of Velvia, Ektar, Ilford FP4+, and TMax. Generally I shot b&w in the Ikoflex, which has an uncoated Tessar, and color in the Yashica, with its coated triplet. I shot both in the RB67. The 35RC was loaded with Reala.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Across the main road running through the grounds are abandoned housing and other facilities for the asylum staff.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Behind these buildings used to be a group of structures known as the String of Pearls, because they were of especially handsome design and linked by a series of covered passageways. Unfortunately all traces of that complex have vanished.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>NYIT has occupied and repurposed a number of the old asylum buildings. Its crown jewel is Building 66, formerly the medical-surgical building, now an administrative center for the campus. During the heyday of the asylum, the most popular treatments for psychiatric illness included surgical lobotomy, electroconvulsive shock therapy, and heavy sedation.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Connected to 66 is the former kitchen and dining hall for the hospital, which became the NYIT culinary school, complete with epicurean restaurant. There was not much activity around this building and I was unable to determine whether either the culinary program or the restaurant are still operating. Too bad; I would have liked to eat there.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Other buildings have been repurposed in ways sensibly related to their original functions, such as nurses' residences now used as student dormitories. One of the largest buildings lies abandoned at the heart of the campus. This photo shows just two of its four large wings.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Known as the Admissions building, this is where patients were first taken on arrival to the asylum after disembarking from the train on the facility's special rail spur from the Long Island Railroad. They were held in wards in this building for examination until their ultimate home within the asylum was decided.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>What appear to be decorative window frames behind the plate glass, as on all of the asylum buildings where patients were held, are made of cast iron.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Many of the facility's buildings were linked by underground or half-underground tunnels. I stood on the roof of one of the half-underground ones to take this picture; it ran to a building that no longer exists.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>The most remarkable and sobering of the surviving buildings is the Sunburst Building. So called because, in plan view, it consists of long wings that radiate from a central courtyard like the spokes of a half-wheel.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>The Sunburst building was for psychiatric patients who also had tuberculosis, and who therefore had to be isolated from the other inmates. In the early part of the 20th century, sunlight and fresh air were thought to be therapeutic for TB. So the wings of Sunburst were set up as rows of patient rooms with open porches, to encourage the occupants to sit in the fresh air, but enclosed by cages so they couldn't escape. Some of the cages are still in place.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>I did not enter any buildings at the facility, but I did poke my digital camera through the cages for a few shots of the former patient quarters inside.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Some of the porches at some point had glass installed between the cage wires.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Walking around Sunburst at dawn was profoundly disturbing. If you are the type who believes, or just likes to fancy, that land and buildings retain the spiritual traces of what has gone on there, this land and the buildings on it are drenched in misery, misunderstanding, compassion, and cruelty.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>In a few wings the cages have been torn out altogether,</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>so it is possible to step up on the porches and contemplate things from a patient's perspective.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Sunburst is part of NYIT's piece of the asylum grounds, and parts of it were renovated and occupied by the college in the 1980s. The college has scaled back its operations at this campus, however, and those parts of the building now have been abandoned a second time.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Next to Sunburst is the jarring incongruity of this early experiment in prefabricated housing, the "Aluminaire." Shown at exhibitions in 1931 and 1932 in New York and subsequently abandoned, the house was rescued and relocated to the Central Islip campus in the 1980s by NYIT's architecture program. That program, however, has since left the campus, and the house essentially is now abandoned again.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Another cluster of asylum buildings known as the James Group is characterized by three-arch entranceways. Some are still in use -- one is even a day care center -- but at least one is abandoned.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
k5083 Posted April 11, 2010 Author Share Posted April 11, 2010 <p>Six or seven feral-looking cats eyed me with loathing from the Japanese garden behind this deserted building. There were more cats inside.</p> <div></div> Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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