„There is no vandalism in Japan!” is one of the most untrue urbex clichés – and whoever still thinks that I will prove wrong with this posting, especially when compared to the previous one. When I visited the *Tuberculosis Hospital For Children* for the first time three years ago it was hardly abandoned and barely touched. No signs of vandalism, no signs of protection. 8 days ago on the other hand…
When my haikyo buddy *Michael Gakuran* came to Kansai to explore my old urbex nemesis *Nara Dreamland* I was devastated I couldn’t join him since I made other plans for that day weeks ago. But I was free the next day, so we met up and I showed him my most closely guarded secret location, the abandoned tuberculosis sanatorium for children I visited and never talked about. Ever. To anybody.
Walking up a gentle slope I didn’t expect a lot of change. Sure, by now two Japanese explorers posted inside shots of the haikyo hospital, so there must be a way in now… But that’s it, right? WRONG!
Approaching the tuberculosis clinic the once locked gate was wide open… and 100 meters down the road we found a brand-new barricade. Well, it was brand-new at one point, now it was grotesquely bended and nevertheless almost flat on the ground. It actually looked like a truck ran over it. Again and again. Not one of those Japanese mini trucks! A massive, manly American one! Most windows of the building were boarded up – or smashed after somebody ripped off the solid wooden panels. A half-open box of plastic syringes was scattered in front of a side entrance and glass was basically everywhere. If I wouldn’t have known better I would have said that this location was abandoned forever and a day.
With all the doors broken up and half the windows smashed in, the Tuberculosis Hospital For Children was exposed to the weather for a couple of years – and it showed. A lot of rooms were moldy, in some the wallpapers were falling off already. To make things worse the hordes of vandals (or a single very serious one!) emptied several fire extinguishers in several key rooms (like the radiology and the laboratory), making it hard to breathe after a short while. And of course some areas were swarmed by gnats, but that’s kind of a given for abandoned places in Japan during autumn…
Although the concrete building featured quite a few glass fronts, a couple of areas were still boarded up and therefore dark; darker than a black steer’s tookus on a moonless prairie night. I didn’t expect that and left spare batteries for my flashlight at home, which didn’t influence the photo shooting, but the second video I took for your viewing pleasure.
Exploring an abandoned place I always try to relate to the place I visit – which wasn’t exactly easy at a tuberculosis clinic for children, especially since I just read an article about the Goiania accident in the Brazilian city of Goiânia. (In 1987 two metal thieves stole a cylinder from an abandoned hospital. They punctured it and scooped out some grams of a glowing substance before selling everything to a nearby scrapyard. There the cylinder was opened and people loved the fascinating material they’ve never seen before and spread it all over town by taking some home. To make a long story short – the substance was cesium chloride, a highly radioactive inorganic compound. To this very day the accident is considered one of the most catastrophic nuclear disasters; 4 people dies, more than 110.000 were examined for radioactive contamination.) So here I was, strolling through an abandoned hospital, fascinated by the countless medical equipment that was left behind…
The Tuberculosis Hospital For Children turned out to be a treasure chest of objects big and small. While some rooms were (almost) completely empty, like the swimming pool and the cafeteria, others were stuffed with analysers, boxes of laboratory glassware and even private items like photos and drawings. Without a doubt one of the highlights was right next to the pool, a small room full of boxes containing envelopes filled with X-rays, MRIs and CTs – all of them taken at a hospital in Osaka, which kind of leads to the conclusion that Tuberculosis Hospital For Children was just an extension of a much larger clinic probably still existing… (More about the hospital haikyo’s history in a future posting, this is all about the exploration!)
Pretty much all of the images came with handwritten doctor’s notes, some of them bilingual (Japanese and English). *Michael* seemed to be quite fascinated by the found, so I left for the other building and only took a few quick shots right before we left. It’s a strange feeling going through other people’s medical files, picking up radiographs of potentially terminally ill people and holding them against the sun to take a photo – most of the MRIs seemed to be of adults, but especially the roentgenograms of kids were… eerie.
The massive concrete construction housing the hospital was connected by a bridge with a rather narrow lightweight building (remember the *previous article*?). Typical Japanese architecture of the 1940s / 50s with walls you could punch through. The floor was kind of yielding, but the huge hornets (or maybe suzumebachi?) flying through the smashed windows made my hurry anyway. As expected the lightweight building turned out to be rather unspectacular. One part was in catastrophic condition, so I didn’t even try to enter it. The rest was a couple of bathrooms, lots of empty rooms and some storage rooms – most likely the school part of the hospital in the 40s before it got its own building down the road. But like I said, that’s a story for another time…
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Great writeup! I especially enjoyed learning about the related Goiania accident. Stuff like that does make me reflect a little harder on the potential dangers present inside abandoned locations. I completely missed that high-tech bathtub and library list!
Thanks! Nothing like a rainy Sunday to get through a writer’s block.
Reading about the Goiania accident was pure coincidence. One of those articles on Spiegel Online, if I remember correctly.
The bathtub was in one of the dark rooms near the place we entered (it was one of the first photos I took actually), the list was on the second floor.
Excellent article, photo and video. Thank you for sharing. Such a shame when people have to vandalize!
Thanks a lot for your kind words! Seeing the hospital now makes me wish I would have found a way in 3 years ago… Although I doubt I would have been brave enough back then to enter all by myself. Even today this is quite a scary place and unlike most Japanese people I don’t believe in ghosts.
awesome…. love the xrays!
I knew they were there, but nevertheless spooky.
ive found some in an abandoned sanatorium aswell…. its exciting 😉
Thanks for sharing! It’s nice to read your blog – makes me feel like I’m exploring together with you (at the sight of the pictures, my heart rate actually went up like I’m right there 😉 ). I think I’d be too much of a coward to enter that kind of place…
Anyway, it’s really fascinating, cause there are so many stories left in this building, but there’s no way to know how they ended.
Thank you so much for your kind words – that’s exactly what I try to accomplish! People reading this blog and watching the movies should have the feeling that they know the place they’ve just read about. That’s why I don’t do enhancing post-production… This blog could be much more polished, but I feel it would lose authenticity.
There are some really nice photos here – I like the pool, the x-ray feet (yes, eerie for sure), the vines growing onto the walkway…
Thanks! I was a bit insecure about this set, but I guess I made the location more spectacular in my mind than it actually was… A good one, but not a spectacular one.
What a great place! This is definitely making me want to try urban exploring!!
Just be careful where you do it! Urban exploration comes with many risks, so you might want to start with a low profile location.
So, what would be your favorite place in the greater Tokyo area?
Fascinating reading!
I’ve actually never done any urbex in Kanto. Haven’t been there in 12 years. But the place I’d like to visit the most must be the Ashio Mining Town. I just love abandoned mines…
Wow – this must have been a unique experience. I like doing walking tours and seeing aspects of Shanghai I’ve never seen – but this takes it to a whole new level!
Well, when I revisited the hospital it was about the 210th location I’ve been to, so unique is relative. But since it was the first abandoned tuberculosis hospital for children I guess you are right. And I’ve never been to a place with X-rays and that much medical equipment left behind. Not a Top 10 location, but definitely Top 50!
Why was the hospital abandoned?
There were not enough cases of tuberculosis anymore. The hospital was opened in the 40s and closed in the early 90s – during that time treatment improved significantly and less and less children got infected with tuberculosis. Kansai is still one of the centers of tuberculosis in Japan, way above average – but almost all cases are amongst day laborers, not children requiring long term hospital stays.
Thanks for letting me camp out in your blog for a little while today. I had a great time and tried to leave my campsite as good as when I arrived. I’ll be back!
Thanks a lot for stopping by – you are welcome back at any time!