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Ypsilanti State Hospital : ウィキペディア英語版 | Ypsilanti State Hospital
The Ypsilanti State Hospital was a hospital that housed and treated patients for mental health disorders. The hospital was located outside of Saline, Michigan on the corners of Platt and Willis roads. ==History== On June 16, 1930 construction for the hospital had begun. Albert Kahn was the architect that had designed the building. Kahn had his own design firm in Detroit, Michigan. The hospital was opened a year after construction had begun. Over the course of the first year the hospital had admitted 922 patients. The estimated cost of living was about eighty cents per day. At the end of World War II The Ypsilanti State Hospital had built two new wards with over 4,000 patients. After adding the two wards, this still brought the hospital over capacity. In 1991, Governor John Engler cut all funding for state hospitals. The Ypsilanti State Hospital was the first to be shut down.〔"Ypsilanti State Hospital." Opacity. Ed. Tom Kirsch. Web. 1 Nov. 2009. .〕 The forensic center stayed open until 2001, but when the hospital closed this left many patients homeless. They were left with nothing; most of the patients had lost contact with family and friends too. The Ypsilanti State Hospital had been abandoned for sixteen years before being demolished in 2006. Toyota bought the property to develop the Toyota Technical Center on the site, and all the remnants of the hospital are gone.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Ypsilanti State Hospital」の詳細全文を読む
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