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View of glazed corridor, from clock tower roof
SC 776420
Description View of glazed corridor, from clock tower roof
Date 17/11/1993
Catalogue Number SC 776420
Category On-line Digital Images
Copy of C 17854
Scope and Content Covered Corridor, Hartwood Hospital, Shotts, North Lanarkshire (now closed and mainly demolished) This long covered corridor, one of two constructed in 1898, originally formed a link to a large dormitory block, also constructed in 1898, at the rear of the main hospital building, and now demolished. The metal-framed corridor is 2.4m wide, and has a glazed roof and windows running the length of its sides. The asylum was constructed as a number of distinct blocks or units, each quite separate but connected by a corridor to the main hospital block. This arrangement of isolating the units minimised the risk of spreading fire, a serious consideration in institutions of the time. Two main corridors, one for male patients and the other for female patients, formed the main arteries of the hospital, with shorter branches giving access to wards, workshops and outbuildings. Hartwood Hospital, a large Baronial-style building with imposing twin towers, was designed by the architect, John L Murray of Biggar (d.1909), and occupied one of the largest hospital sites in Scotland. It was built as the District Asylum for Lanark and opened in 1895 with accommodation for 500 lunatic patients. Between 1898 and 1916 additions included two large ward blocks, each linked to the rear of the main building by a covered corridor, a sanatorium for the isolation of patients suffering from tuberculosis, and a new admission hospital. In 1931 a new nurses' home, designed by the architect, James Lochhead, (1870-1942), opened to the south of the complex, and in c.1935, a new site was developed at nearby Hartwood Hill in response to the growing need for accommodation for mentally handicapped adults. The hospital is now closed and mainly demolished. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © RCAHMS
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