Japan never fails to surprise me. Five and a half years into urban exploration I have been to some amazing abandoned hospitals, pretty much all of them either rather empty (like the *Sankei Hospital* in Hokkaido, damaged by a volcano eruption) or rather old; like the then mind-blowing and now vandalized *Tokushima Countryside Clinic*. One thing though I never expected was to explore an abandoned modern hospital with all furnishings and fittings, fully stocked with medicine and everything you need to diagnose and treat patients – somebody would at least sell the valuable machines and dispose leftover medicine, right?
Well… Have you ever seen an abandoned MRI scanner? 🙂
When you live in a Japanese conurbation life tends to be comfortable and you have access to whatever you need in walking distance – public transportation is barely ever more than 10 minutes away, convenience stores where you can do banking, send parcels, and buy food 24/7 are usually located within five minutes. And of course there are all kinds of doctors that treat everything from minor ailments to deadly diseases (within the limits of their abilities…). When you live in the countryside on the other hand, Japan can become very rural with only a few buses per day and the next supermarket being many kilometers away. With regular hospitals usually being located only in bigger towns, medical care in the countryside can become dire – of all things in areas where it is needed most, as younger people tend to move to large cities, leaving the elderly behind. On the other hand, senior citizens, especially in Japan, tend to have a lot of money… and that’s why medical cooperatives were started. The Wakayama Hospital actually was the result of one of those cooperatives in 1987. Of the estimated 45.000 people in the area, about 6.000 joined the cooperative, each contributing at least 5.000 Yen. That quarter of a million USD was only the beginning, of course, as building, equipping and running a hospital costs much more than that. Luckily some of the cooperative’s members were really into the idea of having a cooperative hospital, and by 2007 the average investment per active member (about 400) was an impressive 3 million Yen – or 25.000 USD. And so the cooperative constructed a 4-storey building with several elevators and all kinds of medical devices you can imagine. The Wakayama Hospital was not only equipped with the latest SPECT, MRI and CT machines – they basically had everything from room filling scanners over ultrasound machines and a dentist chair to plastic syringes and rubber bands. It operated departments such as cardiology, surgery, respiratory diseases, and internal medicine.
For 15 years life was good for the 14 doctors and the dozens of nurses and other staff. In 2000 the hospital billed 2 billion Yen (about 16.5 Million USD) to patients and insurance companies, everything was peachy. From 2002 on though the medical service fees, paid to hospitals and other medical institutions under the medical insurance system, was lowered three times and the hospital’s income fell to 1.3 billion Yen – and with that the number of doctors went down to six. The hospital was in danger of falling into serious debt, so the board of directors decided in June 2007 to close the Wakayama Hospital by the end of the month. A screeching halt and a total disaster for those elderly investors, who not only lost their hard earned money from one moment to the next, but also their neighborhood medical facility. Inpatients were either discharged or transferred to other hospitals in the area, outpatients were confronted with waiting times of up to three hours at nearby hospitals. One of the remaining six doctors at the time of the Wakayama Hospital’s closing stayed behind and opened a small clinic on the premises, together with three nurses – a fraction of the former capacity and a fraction of what was actually needed in the area. The sponsors of the now closed hospital accused the former board of directors of negligence, that they had been out of touch with the community and didn’t know what was really needed – so they went to trial, but apparently nothing came out of it. In the end the hospital was just shut down, fully equipped and squeaky clean.
That’s how I found it a few weeks ago in April of 2015. Most calendars on the walls still showed June 2007, but one or two of them were from 2009 – I guess that’s when the remaining doctor and his three nurses finally gave up. About six years after its complete abandonment nobody seemed to care about the Wakayama Hospital anymore – access points were plenty, not only on the ground floor, but on upper levels, too; accessible via outdoor staircases. Since the Wakayama Hospital wasn’t just a cube shaped building with four outer walls, it started to accumulate pools of water on its several flat roofs. One of them was actually used by birds for a swim. Which was lovely to see, but there was a huge downside to it: Despite being a solid concrete building, the roofs started to leak… and the ground floor (1F in Japan) started to become really nasty in some areas – not just water on the ground inside, but the wallpapers were rotting off, so was the damaged ceiling cladding. After a thorough look on every floor to make sure that the building was structurally still sound, I decided to explore it from top to bottom. That turned out to be an excellent decision as even the upper floors were super interesting and showed only few signs of vandalism. The heavy machinery though was on the ground floor, so I saved the best for last – and the worst.
The best, because it was just mind-blowing to see what kind of items were left behind. Why would anybody abandon an MRI machine? And how could it sit there for six years without being harmed by anybody? It basically looked brand-new, probably as good as it did when last used in 2007. Unbelievable!
The worst, because for the most part the ground floor was either nasty or dark… or both. Mold everywhere, water standing in some rooms, rotting cladding, vandals blocked certain areas, and at least half a dozen emptied fire-extinguishers. Despite me taking pictures as quickly as possible and breathing through a folded towel I had on me, I could feel how my breathing started to clog up, a chemical taste in my mouth. I would have loved to take more photos of the ground floor, but considering the health risks I was exposed to, I stayed as long as I could justify it to myself, and probably longer than most people would have.
“What’s your favorite abandoned place in Japan?” is a question I get asked quite often. Well, I guess the answer depends a bit on my mood, but I can assure you that this is my favorite abandoned place I have written about. Like I said at the beginning of this article, I would have never expected to ever explore a fully equipped modern hospital that is truly abandoned. Sure, sometimes you see half empty closed hospitals that are in a transition phase, explored by infiltrators – but a truly abandoned hospital with that many machines, that much equipment? What an amazing find… with such a sad story!
I really hope you enjoyed reading about the Wakayama Hospital as much as I enjoyed exploring it. And while the photos give a good impression about what the upper floors looked like, you really might want to watch the video I took on the ground floor (1F)… and then head over to the *Tokushima Countryside Clinic* to see what old Japanese hospitals looked like, the kind that were housed in wooden mansions.
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There are so many interesting facets about this location. What a shame that the CoOp folded. It’s strange that the meds were not stolen. I think it’s too bad the heavy duty equipment and fixtures couldn’t have been donated to a worthy, third-world healthcare organization. I’m sure there is a lot of red tape regarding such donations, though.
In Japan, a lot of explorers still respect the whole “Take nothing but photos, leave nothing but footprints” thing – and the general population is afraid of abandoned hospitals, because a lot of people, A LOT of people (!), believe in ghosts… Red tape might be one reason, the other might be maintenance. I am sure those machines are not easy to handle and some of them might contain dangerous materials. It’s like those 1 Euro castles you can get in some European countries. Sure, they cost only one Euro, but then you have to pay for repairs and maintenance and all of a sudden you’ve spent millions…
An abandoned but fully functioning hospital – sounds creepy to me. I can’t help thinking about the hospital in those horror video games where zombie nurses popup from no where!
Fear aside, is it “open” to public that anyone can walk in freely or some sort of permission is needed?
Urbex is always a grey area at best and illegal at worst. I never encourage people to enter abandoned buildings as it can cause a variety of health and legal issues!
How a fully functional hospital with such good gear could be abandoned is a mystery. As stated below, it’s a shame the equipment couldn’t be donated, but considering the radiation poisoning incident that happened a long time ago in Brazil due to inappropriate disposal of an old radiation therapy machine, I can understand why it was abandoned.
I guess it’s a lot easier to let everything rot than to figure out all the liability problems that selling or donating everything could cause.
Amazing story but incredibly sad… thanks for the info and great photos.
Thanks for stopping by – please tell a friend! 🙂
Fantastic find! I especially like Pink Room and the abandoned Ultrasound equipment. You did well.
Thanks a lot – one of my favorite abandoned hospitals in Japan. Saw it on another blog, located it, went there ASAP. They already built a solar park nearby and the huge parking lot just begs for some additional panels…
Got to move on things quickly in the world of Urbex for sure!
I really don’t understand why this stuff wasn’t sold to pay off investors? Usually if there’s a bankrupcy over here, the instate someone to overview selling all the assets to pay off the depts as much as possible.
I’ve thought this a few times while looking at your posts. I mean, it looks amazing, but it’s such a waste!
Look at the stuff. None of the devices seen in the pictures could have been made after the mid 1990ies. In medicine such old devices are only of scrap value. Especially ultrasounds. Ultrasounds have become so cheap, and the advantages in technology are so lage that nobody would want that old stuff. And old CTs are a maintenance nightmare (the X-Ray tubes easily burn out).
Probably liability. I remember donating food for charity was / is kind of a problem in Germany for that very reason.
Amazing, and interesting.
Thanks – please tell a friend, Lynne! 🙂
awesome,i doubt i will ever find anything so “untouched” like that in cz hahaha…all the computers,televisions and everything left behind…you shall revisit it in few years,to see how it will goes there haha
It’s quite a drive to get there, but I’d love to go back one day. Though I am pretty sure they’ll demolish it soon and replace it with a solar park. Happens all the time…
This place is awesome. I have literally been going through each of your posts (StumbleUpon brought me to a website that listed your blog as a space of abandoned things and since I live in new england and am obsessed with abandoned things but have little to no access to them and the ones I do, I will either be arrested for stepping into or are far too dangerous for me with no experience)
But this article is amazing. I’ve never seen anything so modern and full of items left behind. I know the devices are old, but the medicine and sterile tools were all still usable when the place closed. Selling them to another hospital would have at least offset something of their loss.
I just have to say that your blog is an awesome window into other cultures forgotten places and I appreciate the risk you take. Your ability to take on places like this is envious, but I suppose I can just live vicariously through you. Lol.
There is a local house in my town that is called The Pink Mansion. I know it was last actually occupied about 6 years ago by the last person in the family it belonged to. I know that it’s been up for sale before but it currently has no signage or indication that it is doing anything but rotting. I also know that it has been broken into before unfortunately and that there was some vandalism. I was looking to see if you had any advice for how to approach getting in. Like you, I don’t want to break in or cause harm. But the Victorian style and the architecture of this house is awesome and lonely looking.
If I can, I want to go up and just take pictures from the outside to give you a better idea. Maybe if you had time we could correspond a little via email.
Thank you for your exploration and your photos and letting those that struggle with Urban Exploration, live through your words and your lens.