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Photography Projects

The psychiatric hospital was revolutionary at the time in the sense that it was a departure from the asylums of folklore, which were overcrowded places where gross human rights abuses often occurred. The asylum was built to alleviate overcrowding in its own asylums, was a "farm colony" asylum, where patients worked in a variety of farm-related activities, such as feeding livestock and growing food, as this was considered to be a form of therapy.

Eventually, the Kings County Asylum began to suffer from the very thing that it attempted to relieve—overcrowding. New York State responded to the problem in 1895, when control of the asylum passed into state hands, it was renamed the Kings Park State Hospital. The surrounding community adopted the name "Kings Park," by which it is still known today. The state eventually built the hospital into a self-sufficient community that not only grew its own food, but also generated its own heat and electricity, had its own Long Island Rail Road spur and housed its staff on-site.

 

As patient populations grew throughout the early part of the 20th century, the hospital continued to expand. By the late 1930s, the state began to build upward instead of outward. During this period, the famous 13-story Building 93 was constructed and dubbed "the most famous asylum building on Long Island," & was completed in 1939. It was used as an infirmary for the facility's geriatric patients, as well as for patients with chronic physical ailments.

 

After World War II, patient populations at Kings Park and the other Long Island asylums increased markedly. In 1954, the patient census at Kings Park topped 9,303. By the time Kings Park reached its peak patient population, the old "rest and relaxation" philosophy surrounding farming had been succeeded by more invasive techniques of pre-frontal lobotomies and electroshock therapy.

 

However, those methods were soon abandoned after 1955, following the introduction of Thorazine, the first widely used drug in the treatment of mental illness. As medication made it possible for patients to live 'normal' lives outside of a mental institution, the need for large facilities such as Kings Park diminished, and the patient population began to decrease. In addition, activists worked in legal suits through the 1970s to reduce the patient population in major institutions, arguing that people could better be supported in smaller community centers.

 

By the early 1990s, the Kings Park Psychiatric Center, as it came to be known, was much reduced. Many of the buildings were shut down or reduced in usage. This included the massive Building 93. By the early 1990s, only the first few floors of the building were in use.

While many patients were de-institutionalized and large facilities were closed, there was a shortage of small community centers, which were never developed in the number needed. This resulted in many more mentally ill people being caught up and retained in jails and prisons because of difficulties in dealing with the world.

 

Many of the homeless in urban areas are mentally ill, people with chronic illnesses who have difficulty keeping up with medication regimens or resist them.

 

In response to the declining patient population, the New York State Office of Mental Health developed plans to close Kings Park in the early 1990s. The plans called for Kings Park to close, and the remaining patients from both facilities to be transferred to the still-operational Pilgrim Psychiatric Center, or be discharged.

 

In the fall of 1996, the plans were implemented. The few remaining patients from Kings Park were transferred to Pilgrim, ending Kings Park's 111-year run.

Plans to create and gentrify the area were set in motion by a local developer and builder. Except, it never happened. 

 

For the last 23 years the buildings remain standing, ivy growing stories tall, trees birthed into the cracked windows to establish new life in the haunting remains. Almost 3 decades later, patient beds, recreation rooms, staff housing, patient's worn clothing, broken cabinetry, toiletries, isolation rooms with thick metal creaking doors, paperwork strewn about but still legible, archaic medical tools, psychiatric journals and books, hooded hair drying stations from basement salons and so much more....  left to rot in these condemned buildings that serve as reminders of the torture and torment of the mentally ill.

 

The buildings, all abandoned, do not allow entry and all doorways are boarded up with thick graffiti stained wood.

 

This very personal photography project was created with a fellow mental health clinician and photographer to preserve and NEVER FORGET those we lost and those who survived the torture BEHIND CLOSED DOORS.

 

***Photos available for exhibit*** Please contact us to discuss details. Photos are not for sale.

Facilities

Kings Park Psychiatric Hospital

KPPH operated from 1885 until 1996, when the State of New York closed the facility, releasing its few remaining patients or transferring them to the still-operational nearby Pilgrim Psychiatric Center.

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