(Blatantly ripped from Wiki as short on time and laptop prob gona crash again)
Some Sunnyside history...
Sunnyside Royal Hospital was a psychiatric hospital located in Montrose, Scotland. The hospital was founded in 1781 by Susan Carnegie as the Montrose Lunatic Asylum, Infirmary & Dispensary and obtained a Royal Charter in 1810.
In 1834, the Governors of the asylum, carrying out the wishes of Mrs Carnegie (who had strongly advocated the appointment of a medical specialist in insanity) appointed the phrenologist (a person that uses a pseudo medicine based on the belief that mental faculties and character traits are indicated by the configurations of their skull, its shape and size etc...I knew someone that had an unusually large head but their brain was very small, hence blowing that theory out the water) William A.F. Brown as medical superintendent.
Browne was to prove an inspired choice and an energetic and resourceful leader. He regarded public education as part of his duties, and gave a series of lectures which became enormously popular and influential. In 1837, five lectures were published together under the title “What Asylums Were, Are and Ought To Be”; this book came to the attention of the Dumfries philanthropist Elizabeth Crichton. She travelled to Montrose, interviewed Browne and offered him the equivalent post at the Crichton Royal in Dumfries. Crichton offered Browne a raise from £150 to £350 per annum. Browne was succeeded at Montrose by Richard Poole, an early psychiatric historian, and, later, by Dr James Howden, who identified cases of pellagra in the asylum.
In 1858, a new improved asylum was completed to the north of Montrose in the village of Hillside on lands of the farm of Sunnyside and the old site was vacated. This site was further developed with the construction of a new facility for private patients called Carnegie House in 1899. Despite this addition, overcrowding was a problem, as the asylum's patient numbers had grown to 670 by 1900. This situation required additional building work to be undertaken. Consequently, two new buildings - Howden Villa (1901) and Northesk Villa (1904)- were added to the facility. Additional staff were required to care for the additional patients and the Westmount Cottages were built in 1905 to house them. In 1911 the lease of Sunnyside Farm finally expired and over 52 acres were purchased for the sum of £4500. A further development was the addition of Angus House, which was built in 1939 to accommodate elderly patients suffering from dementia.
In 1948, the National Health Service 1946 (Scotland) Act brought the hospital under control of the Eastern Regional Hospital Board. Its name was changed from the Royal Asylum of Montrose to the Royal Mental Hospital of Montrose. In 1962 it became Sunnyside Royal Hospital and came under the jurisdiction of new management. During the 1950s and 1960s, the introduction of new drugs lessened the need for prolonged admission of patients. In addition, the Mental Health (Scotland) Act of 1960 also significantly altered legislation in respect of mental illness and reduced the grounds on which someone could be detained in a mental hospital.
The archives of the hospital are held by Archive Services, University of Dundee as part of the NHS Tayside archive.
The site was officially closed in late 2011 and most patients were sent to a new £20 million build at Stracathro Hospital (also in Angus) - the Susan Carnegie Centre. Others were placed in the community. Sunnyside was open for 230 years before its closure, and was the oldest psychiatric hospital in Scotland.
Sunnyside has been sold by the NHS and is currently awaiting redevelopment. Some of the outbuildings and less aesthetically pleasing buildings will be demolished but the main building will thankfully be retained.
The explore...
I have wanted to explore this beautiful building for over five years, but I never really thought I’d get the chance to be honest. I have seen some amazing images of the place and each time I saw more photographs of it I yearned to see it all the more. I had never been to Scotland before and a 1,000 mile round trip kind of put me off a bit, especially as I’d read reports of so many failed attempts and instant captures... my heart was definitely up for the trip, but could my little motor handle the distance without a service for over 50,000 miles or my head handle a failure
My good mate Dez was going up to Scotland for a “normal family holiday with his missus and kids,” so I politely mentioned to him that I never wanted to hear from him again, ever, unless he did a full recce of the spectacular Sunnyside for me. I gave him a strict brief; film every bloody door and window, walk around the perimeter...twice... then do it again, get every dam angle on the place, I needed a virtual tour, I warned him, “Don’t be giving me no noisey, shaky blurred bulshit, your not doin a youtube vid now, I need clarity, I need to know what’s goin on, sort it...please”. He’s shown me pic’s from fb that others had put up on Sunnyside, now it was HIS time... he was to stop winding me up and do something f00kin useful!!!
Well, to my utter astonishment, total disbelieve and sheer flabbergastedness I got a Whatsapp vid the next morning of Dez and his son Jack waltzin about the site and floating through an open window, hovering up a staircase and drifting into one of the corridors. WTF??? This was only meant to be a recce!!! How was this possible??? I was more confused than usual. Was this real? Had he faked it? Could he be sooo cruel??? I didn’t understand wtf was going on, there was no helpline that could possibly explain this, my phone had come apart from my intense grip, the back had come off and the battery had dropped out, my heart was racing me head was a mess, it had gone too far...I just had to get there, like NOW!!! But first I had to wind up a few others that I knew wanted to go too hahaha...no I’m not mean lol the few folks that have been silly enough to give me their numbers I txt them the access details...then byeee I’m off to Scotland!
After a mediocre 9hr drive, stopping just the once to have a quick caffeine fix and 40 roll ups I was there! The moment I had been nervously cherishing had finally arrived! I had waited five years for this!
By now it was 6pm and the sun was just setting to the rear of the ominous main building. It’s glorious stone was in shade, I took a few shots and looked for the way in. The access from the video had now been sealed, I NEEDED to find a new way in, and to my surprise and relief I did. But it was too late for any shots now, the light had gone, so I headed back to my car to crash out for the night. I was so overwhelmed thinking about the next morning, that I had actually forgotten that I had booked a B&B for my first night, yup, I was trying to put out the thoughts from my head of waking up two inches shorter and with several fused vertebrae from kipping in my KA, which has become standard practice for me, that I neglected to realise I had booked a comfy bed 10 miles down the west coast. So off I flew, ooOoo a B&B, I’ve never experienced such urbex luxury, now I had booked meself into me own little room, I was starting to feel like a grown up now
2am the fire alarm rang out...I woke up, didn’t know where the f00k I was, fumbled around for the light switch whilst trying to get dressed, grabbed me camera, then made my way outside onto the wet pavement. I was the only c@%t there. Nobody else could be arsed to leave their rooms. Then the owner came jogging along from the house up the road...”Someone’s been bloody smoking in their rooms again” he kinda laughed but looked pissed. I stood there with my trousers on inside out trying to smoke a wet roll up, I was knackered and could have done without this shit...but then I thought to myself, hey wtf, I’m off to Sunnyside in the morning, then everything suddenly felt good
Thanks Dez for your video, as without watching it I probably wouldn’t have made the effort to have ventured the mission through fear of failure
There are quite a lot of pic’s here, but I am very passionate about this place, and they will just end up sitting on my external hard drive and that’s a very gloomy place to be
So I hope you enjoy lookin at Scotland’s finest asylum...
The very impressive main building
sunnyside 2 099 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Some of the wards and corridors...
sunnyside 1 398 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 470 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 506 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 604 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 640 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 672 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 888 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 922 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 985 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 992 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1348 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I noticed that all of the clocks within the main building stopped at around 11.10
sunnyside 1 1416 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1426 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1440 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1723 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
The hairdressers
sunnyside 1 1715 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1737 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1763 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
This “puzzle wheelchair” came with no instructions or fixtures, so took me about 10 minutes to reassemble and “balance” in the correct way. If I had sneezed it would have blown apart.
sunnyside 1 1747 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1811 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1855 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1868 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1906 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1923 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1992 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 2014 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 224 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 239 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
When I look at this shot now I can have a little laugh about it, but it wasn’t so funny at the time! I was trying to get the camera to see what my eye could see...I wanted that little silver door knob reflected three times in the broken mirror fragments, (ok, don’t ask me why, nufink makes much sense to me anymore) so I could see this easily this, but getting the lens to view it this way was a total nightmare lol. I was adjusting the tripod and head literally in millimetres at a time, for well over 10 minutes, yeah longer than the wheelchair puzzle. I had finally got it right, when crash! The door flung open and 3 lads steamed in on their phones talkin shite...I looked around, I was proper pissed, I think they could tell hahaha...before I could say anything they had gone. I hadn’t seen anyone for the first 4hrs in there it was lovely, then the place got busy, bumped into a couple of decent local lads, but mainly twats, English twats I’m ashamed to say, gutted the locals didn’t catch up with them as I’m sure they wuda stopped smashing the windows and kicking the doors in that I could hear getting trashed from a distance.
sunnyside 2 252 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 264 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 279 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 358 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I didn’t think I should put the same pigeon shot in Mikeymutt
sunnyside 2 365 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 378 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 390 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 394 by
Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
One of the workshops...
sunnyside 1 1689 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1628 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1599 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
If you looked up inside that little door, it is a really tight squeeze, but there is an internal ladder running up the inside of the flue. The hole you can climb up is much narrower than the width of the chimney so it’s rather deceiving, it would be a tight squeeze for the slimmest of people. When I was outside getting some externals I saw some dude standing on the top of the chimney and when I realised how he had got up there it freaked me out a bit
sunnyside 1 1592 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 144 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1574 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1542 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1516 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1489 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Into the amazing hall...
sunnyside 1 1130 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1136 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1071 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1057 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1160 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1190 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
My neck still hurts from getting this shot as my camera’s LCD isn’t articulated, my live view is too unreliable at focusing and I couldn’t lie on the floor as it was covered in pigeon shit
sunnyside 1 1311 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Where the hospital radio was located
sunnyside 1 1205 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1208 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Mortuary and Chapel of Rest
sunnyside 1 197 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 026 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 036 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 207 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
The Chapel
sunnyside 2 438 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 444 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I hope you have enjoyed looking at this wonderful place, I loved every minute of it there and would jump at the chance of a revisit
Well this is my final post of the year folks, thanks everyone for your comments over the last 12 months, I really appreciate any feedback, I’m not a snowflake, so just say what you think
Happy New Year to explorer’s everywhere, be lucky and stay safe in 2018
Catch up laters...byeeee
Some Sunnyside history...
Sunnyside Royal Hospital was a psychiatric hospital located in Montrose, Scotland. The hospital was founded in 1781 by Susan Carnegie as the Montrose Lunatic Asylum, Infirmary & Dispensary and obtained a Royal Charter in 1810.
In 1834, the Governors of the asylum, carrying out the wishes of Mrs Carnegie (who had strongly advocated the appointment of a medical specialist in insanity) appointed the phrenologist (a person that uses a pseudo medicine based on the belief that mental faculties and character traits are indicated by the configurations of their skull, its shape and size etc...I knew someone that had an unusually large head but their brain was very small, hence blowing that theory out the water) William A.F. Brown as medical superintendent.
Browne was to prove an inspired choice and an energetic and resourceful leader. He regarded public education as part of his duties, and gave a series of lectures which became enormously popular and influential. In 1837, five lectures were published together under the title “What Asylums Were, Are and Ought To Be”; this book came to the attention of the Dumfries philanthropist Elizabeth Crichton. She travelled to Montrose, interviewed Browne and offered him the equivalent post at the Crichton Royal in Dumfries. Crichton offered Browne a raise from £150 to £350 per annum. Browne was succeeded at Montrose by Richard Poole, an early psychiatric historian, and, later, by Dr James Howden, who identified cases of pellagra in the asylum.
In 1858, a new improved asylum was completed to the north of Montrose in the village of Hillside on lands of the farm of Sunnyside and the old site was vacated. This site was further developed with the construction of a new facility for private patients called Carnegie House in 1899. Despite this addition, overcrowding was a problem, as the asylum's patient numbers had grown to 670 by 1900. This situation required additional building work to be undertaken. Consequently, two new buildings - Howden Villa (1901) and Northesk Villa (1904)- were added to the facility. Additional staff were required to care for the additional patients and the Westmount Cottages were built in 1905 to house them. In 1911 the lease of Sunnyside Farm finally expired and over 52 acres were purchased for the sum of £4500. A further development was the addition of Angus House, which was built in 1939 to accommodate elderly patients suffering from dementia.
In 1948, the National Health Service 1946 (Scotland) Act brought the hospital under control of the Eastern Regional Hospital Board. Its name was changed from the Royal Asylum of Montrose to the Royal Mental Hospital of Montrose. In 1962 it became Sunnyside Royal Hospital and came under the jurisdiction of new management. During the 1950s and 1960s, the introduction of new drugs lessened the need for prolonged admission of patients. In addition, the Mental Health (Scotland) Act of 1960 also significantly altered legislation in respect of mental illness and reduced the grounds on which someone could be detained in a mental hospital.
The archives of the hospital are held by Archive Services, University of Dundee as part of the NHS Tayside archive.
The site was officially closed in late 2011 and most patients were sent to a new £20 million build at Stracathro Hospital (also in Angus) - the Susan Carnegie Centre. Others were placed in the community. Sunnyside was open for 230 years before its closure, and was the oldest psychiatric hospital in Scotland.
Sunnyside has been sold by the NHS and is currently awaiting redevelopment. Some of the outbuildings and less aesthetically pleasing buildings will be demolished but the main building will thankfully be retained.
The explore...
I have wanted to explore this beautiful building for over five years, but I never really thought I’d get the chance to be honest. I have seen some amazing images of the place and each time I saw more photographs of it I yearned to see it all the more. I had never been to Scotland before and a 1,000 mile round trip kind of put me off a bit, especially as I’d read reports of so many failed attempts and instant captures... my heart was definitely up for the trip, but could my little motor handle the distance without a service for over 50,000 miles or my head handle a failure
My good mate Dez was going up to Scotland for a “normal family holiday with his missus and kids,” so I politely mentioned to him that I never wanted to hear from him again, ever, unless he did a full recce of the spectacular Sunnyside for me. I gave him a strict brief; film every bloody door and window, walk around the perimeter...twice... then do it again, get every dam angle on the place, I needed a virtual tour, I warned him, “Don’t be giving me no noisey, shaky blurred bulshit, your not doin a youtube vid now, I need clarity, I need to know what’s goin on, sort it...please”. He’s shown me pic’s from fb that others had put up on Sunnyside, now it was HIS time... he was to stop winding me up and do something f00kin useful!!!
Well, to my utter astonishment, total disbelieve and sheer flabbergastedness I got a Whatsapp vid the next morning of Dez and his son Jack waltzin about the site and floating through an open window, hovering up a staircase and drifting into one of the corridors. WTF??? This was only meant to be a recce!!! How was this possible??? I was more confused than usual. Was this real? Had he faked it? Could he be sooo cruel??? I didn’t understand wtf was going on, there was no helpline that could possibly explain this, my phone had come apart from my intense grip, the back had come off and the battery had dropped out, my heart was racing me head was a mess, it had gone too far...I just had to get there, like NOW!!! But first I had to wind up a few others that I knew wanted to go too hahaha...no I’m not mean lol the few folks that have been silly enough to give me their numbers I txt them the access details...then byeee I’m off to Scotland!
After a mediocre 9hr drive, stopping just the once to have a quick caffeine fix and 40 roll ups I was there! The moment I had been nervously cherishing had finally arrived! I had waited five years for this!
By now it was 6pm and the sun was just setting to the rear of the ominous main building. It’s glorious stone was in shade, I took a few shots and looked for the way in. The access from the video had now been sealed, I NEEDED to find a new way in, and to my surprise and relief I did. But it was too late for any shots now, the light had gone, so I headed back to my car to crash out for the night. I was so overwhelmed thinking about the next morning, that I had actually forgotten that I had booked a B&B for my first night, yup, I was trying to put out the thoughts from my head of waking up two inches shorter and with several fused vertebrae from kipping in my KA, which has become standard practice for me, that I neglected to realise I had booked a comfy bed 10 miles down the west coast. So off I flew, ooOoo a B&B, I’ve never experienced such urbex luxury, now I had booked meself into me own little room, I was starting to feel like a grown up now
2am the fire alarm rang out...I woke up, didn’t know where the f00k I was, fumbled around for the light switch whilst trying to get dressed, grabbed me camera, then made my way outside onto the wet pavement. I was the only c@%t there. Nobody else could be arsed to leave their rooms. Then the owner came jogging along from the house up the road...”Someone’s been bloody smoking in their rooms again” he kinda laughed but looked pissed. I stood there with my trousers on inside out trying to smoke a wet roll up, I was knackered and could have done without this shit...but then I thought to myself, hey wtf, I’m off to Sunnyside in the morning, then everything suddenly felt good
Thanks Dez for your video, as without watching it I probably wouldn’t have made the effort to have ventured the mission through fear of failure
There are quite a lot of pic’s here, but I am very passionate about this place, and they will just end up sitting on my external hard drive and that’s a very gloomy place to be
So I hope you enjoy lookin at Scotland’s finest asylum...
The very impressive main building
sunnyside 2 099 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Some of the wards and corridors...
sunnyside 1 398 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 470 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 506 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 604 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 640 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 672 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 888 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 922 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 985 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 992 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1348 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I noticed that all of the clocks within the main building stopped at around 11.10
sunnyside 1 1416 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1426 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1440 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1723 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
The hairdressers
sunnyside 1 1715 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1737 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1763 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
This “puzzle wheelchair” came with no instructions or fixtures, so took me about 10 minutes to reassemble and “balance” in the correct way. If I had sneezed it would have blown apart.
sunnyside 1 1747 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1811 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1855 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1868 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1906 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1923 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1992 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 2014 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 224 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 239 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
When I look at this shot now I can have a little laugh about it, but it wasn’t so funny at the time! I was trying to get the camera to see what my eye could see...I wanted that little silver door knob reflected three times in the broken mirror fragments, (ok, don’t ask me why, nufink makes much sense to me anymore) so I could see this easily this, but getting the lens to view it this way was a total nightmare lol. I was adjusting the tripod and head literally in millimetres at a time, for well over 10 minutes, yeah longer than the wheelchair puzzle. I had finally got it right, when crash! The door flung open and 3 lads steamed in on their phones talkin shite...I looked around, I was proper pissed, I think they could tell hahaha...before I could say anything they had gone. I hadn’t seen anyone for the first 4hrs in there it was lovely, then the place got busy, bumped into a couple of decent local lads, but mainly twats, English twats I’m ashamed to say, gutted the locals didn’t catch up with them as I’m sure they wuda stopped smashing the windows and kicking the doors in that I could hear getting trashed from a distance.
sunnyside 2 252 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 264 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 279 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 358 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I didn’t think I should put the same pigeon shot in Mikeymutt
sunnyside 2 365 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 378 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 390 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 394 by
Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
One of the workshops...
sunnyside 1 1689 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1628 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1599 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
If you looked up inside that little door, it is a really tight squeeze, but there is an internal ladder running up the inside of the flue. The hole you can climb up is much narrower than the width of the chimney so it’s rather deceiving, it would be a tight squeeze for the slimmest of people. When I was outside getting some externals I saw some dude standing on the top of the chimney and when I realised how he had got up there it freaked me out a bit
sunnyside 1 1592 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 144 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1574 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1542 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1516 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1489 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Into the amazing hall...
sunnyside 1 1130 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1136 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1071 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1057 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1160 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1190 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
My neck still hurts from getting this shot as my camera’s LCD isn’t articulated, my live view is too unreliable at focusing and I couldn’t lie on the floor as it was covered in pigeon shit
sunnyside 1 1311 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Where the hospital radio was located
sunnyside 1 1205 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 1208 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
Mortuary and Chapel of Rest
sunnyside 1 197 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 026 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 036 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 1 207 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
The Chapel
sunnyside 2 438 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
sunnyside 2 444 by Pretty Vacant, on Flickr
I hope you have enjoyed looking at this wonderful place, I loved every minute of it there and would jump at the chance of a revisit
Well this is my final post of the year folks, thanks everyone for your comments over the last 12 months, I really appreciate any feedback, I’m not a snowflake, so just say what you think
Happy New Year to explorer’s everywhere, be lucky and stay safe in 2018
Catch up laters...byeeee