One of my favorite kind of places to explore in Japan are abandoned hospitals, especially the old ones made of wood or located in lavish mansions – most of them time capsules that take you 70, 80, 90, 100 years back in time. Like the Horseshoe Hospital…
The Horseshoe Hospital is a name I came up with for a virtually unknown abandoned hospital in the Japanese countryside, mainly because… well… because it was shaped like a horseshoe. Two dear friends of mine took me there (for which I am incredibly grateful for!) and went ahead inside, so by the time I entered the ground floor through a missing door I was all by myself – and surrounded by gardening equipment. I thought this was supposed to be an abandoned hospital? The first couple of rooms I checked were filled with all kinds of useless items. Since the building was mostly overgrown, the light inside the hospital was quite unusual and rather interesting, but overall it was basically a hallway shaped like a U with rooms only to one side. Halfway through, the corridor was blocked by a few wooden desks, so I took the opportunity to take some photos before passing the obstacle and using the rather gloomy staircase to get to the upper floor.
The upper floor looked more like a hospital – less trash, more rooms with a bed and a night table. Sadly not much more medical equipment. But a nice view outside, since a part of the hospital has been demolished a while ago; months at least, probably years – no demolition equipment in sight anymore.
It has been quite a while since I last explored an abandoned wooden hospital in Japan, more than half a year (*and even longer since I last wrote about one*), so this was quite an exciting exploration, despite the fact that only a few things reminded me that this has been a hospital once – not the gardening equipment, not the advertising posters for diamond rings, and not the room with the model ship and the rather old pin-up poster. Sadly I don’t know much about the Horseshoe Hospital and the only thing I found that could help dating it, was a calendar from 1988… Nevertheless it was great fun and one of the few July explorations I don’t regret, despite a few mosquitos and the unbearably humid heat. Even at 7 a.m. it felt like being in a sauna – and by the time I finally left the Horseshoe Hospital (one and a half hours later) I was able to wring out my T-shirt…
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Not one of the older hospitals, then?
Probably one of the oldest. Without many clues those hospitals are hard to date for somebody who doesn’t know much about architecture, but I’d say the building was pre-war.
Oh, OK, so 70 plus years!
Yeah, something like that – built 80 years ago, closed 30 years ago…
OK…interesting find
I used to be sooooo addicted to your site, videos and FB page and kinda got away from it… buttt, I came back to check In and you have not let me down. Hahaha. My 4 year old child is soooo obsessed with “banded stuff.” Haha. So, you are the mothership to come to. Just AWESOME!!!! Do you get paid to do this stuff? Or is this *pure* hobby? I have sooooo many questions but, I will leave it at that for now! Thanks so much for sharing your adventures!! You are living the dream! (Welp, my dream at least.) Love it!!! Cheers from the east coast of Canada! 🙌👌🤗😁❤️
Hey Nikki,
Thanks a lot for your kind words – and welcome back!
I don’t get paid to explore or to write this blog, it’s just an expensive Hobby… Every once in a while I am able to charge commercial users of my photos a few bucks, but that’s nothing in comparison to what I spend on transportation, accommodations, equipment, …
Hope to hear from you again soon,
Florian
The hallway configuration of the hospital reminds me of some of the school hallways you’ve shown in previous videos. It’s really an intelligent layout.
I guess it’s a good way to save money on lighting… 🙂
nice,but the garden itself dosent look that bad yet,maybe someone do some gardering once in a while so it doesnt look all abandoned or something,given to the gardering equipment you found?
I’m pretty sure a neighbour uses the entrance as a storage shed.