A rare example of a padded cell still in situ. This Pocock Brother’s padded cell is in the Royal Hospital Haslar, a Naval hospital in Gosport.
A rare example of a padded cell still in situ. This Pocock Brother’s padded cell is in the Royal Hospital Haslar, a Naval hospital in Gosport.
The Royal Hospital Haslar was the largest hospital in England. It had a long and distinguished history serving military personnel, and later civilians. The site closed in 2009.
The Central Bathhouse, part of the Men’s Sanatorium at the Beelitz Military Hospital Complex is an amazing ornate building with many stunning features.
The Pavilion of the Male Sanatorium at Beelitz was the primary treatment area for sufferers of tuberculosis. The building is huge with extensive open-air treatment areas.
The wards form part of the women’s lung hospital at the Beelitz Military Hospital Complex and feature a lot of decay.
An abandoned military hospital in Germany. Built around 1890, the hospital was in use until around 1990. An operating table remains in the hospitals theatre.
Cambridge Military Hospital opened in 1879 to serve the British Army. It was also used by the NHS in later years and closed in 1996.
The fully equipped Radiology department at Cambridge Military Hospital, in perfect condition complete with functional X-Ray machines.