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    Arrow Chapel Allerton and Eastmoor REPORT October 08

    Myself, Mykal and Sandman had a bit of a jaunt to Leeds a couple of weekends ago. Chapel Allerton first:

    Not a large site but my, it has some lovely features! Access was nice and easy for a change, due to this I'm surprised there hasnt been any vandalism. The place is pretty trashed mind but seems to be the building just falling to bits more than any human aid. Didnt explore upstairs due to the extremely dodgy floors.



    zee exterior



    First corridor you come too.



    mmmmm nommy pillars



    gorgeous ceiling



    the sun made an appearance, casting some gorgeous shadows



    more sun goodness



    halfway up the stairs, looking back



    looking down from the top of the stairs, bit of a hairy place to be standing!



    time for detail shots! most of the railings have gone but there was the odd stump left



    top of the pillars, sorry I know these have a proper name but my minds gone blank



    pigeon-poo-tastic



    nice peely paint



    last but not least, my favourite shot of the day which I think sums up the building nicely!



    Bit of info:

    "The original Chapel Allerton Hospital was opened in May 1927 by HRH Princess Mary, and was located in the grounds of the stately mansion of Gledhow Grove, off Harehills Lane, with the house itself also being used as part of the site.


    The hospital, run by the Ministry of Pensions, was built in response to the continuing needs of the thousands of servicemen who suffered grievous wounds during the 1914-1918 war.


    Costing £130,000, it provided a total of 200 beds and was designed to cater for former military personnel from Yorkshire, East Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, replacing the old military hospital at Beckett's Park in Leeds.


    Equipment in the new hospital included two operating theatres, X-ray, a massage and electrical department and a bacteriological library. Wards were strictly segregated between officers and other ranks, as was the custom at that time.


    As war clouds gathered in Europe again in the late 1930s, hasty thought was given to the need to expand facilities at Chapel Allerton Hospital. It was feared, wrongly as it turned out, that casualties in the new conflict would be on the scale of those seen in the First World War.


    Eight hutted wards were accordingly built in 1940, and the nurses' home was expanded. Wartime casualties hurt at battles from Dunkirk the D-day and beyond were treated at the hospital, but fortunately the numbers maimed were much less than in the previous conflict.


    After the war, Chapel Allerton Hospital passed from the Ministry of Pensions to the Ministry of Health in 1953. With the gradual decrease in numbers of war pensioners needing treatment, the hospital took on a more general role, for example in caring for pre-convalescent cases.


    During the 1960s, a new outpatients department, X-ray plus therapy and pathology departments and a 4-bedded cardiac monitoring unit all opened.
    By the 1970s, serious concern was being expressed at the state of parts of the hospital, and total closure was one option discussed. Instead, a new £1.2m development, the Newton Green Wing, was given the go-ahead, and was officially opened in 1975 by Sir Keith Joseph. Designed to care for elderly patients, with six wards and a day hospital, this was located away from the main Chapel Allerton site, on the other side of Harehills Lane.


    The future of the rest of the hospital remained in some doubt until 1991, when the newly created United Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust secured approval for the reprovision of the old parts of the hospital. This was to be built on to the existing Newton Green Wing, and would result in the closure of the original site.
    The new Chapel Allerton Hospital (the Newton Green Wing name having disappeared) was begun in 1992 and completed in record time two years later.
    Chapel Allerton Hospital was the first in Leeds to be designed with works of art commissioned as part of the building project, and numerous striking features can be seen in and around the hospital.


    The old hospital, after standing empty for some time, has now largely been demolished, and new housing is being built on the site. The mansion, a listed building with many original 19th century features, survives."

    And about the records in the basement:

    http://www.yorkshireeveningpost.co.u...old.3753235.jp


    Visited yesterday with Mykal and Sandman. Parked a while away due to being told that the neighbours round there were similar to those of St Marys aka nosey bastards.

    Slowly made our way along the path with a dogwalker infront of us, he eventually saw us anyway but didnt seem care too much. Eventually found the access where I was confronted with a big security spider on the window sill with a little sign saying "YOU SHALL NOT PASS!". After making Mykal kill said security spider, in we went.

    Well, our first thoughts were, oh my this is boring. Dark. Nothing really to photograph. Found the gym and woodwork rooms, still boring. The bar and upper loft room, boring. Courtyard was okay, but still kinda boring.













    We *were* gonna leave in search of a more interesting site to spend the bulk of the day at but in the end we decided to keep nosing around for a bit longer and eventually we found the interesting bit, the main dorms with all the bits and pieces in. At last, something decent to photograph!









    My favourite 3 from the day:








    Didnt find the swimming pool, only realised there was one just now reading other peoples reports! Ah well.
    Last edited by missfish; 06-11-2008 at 08:37 PM.

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