Asylums now converted into homes
By KEN MAGUIRE
Associated Press
| |||
DANVERS, Mass. — In real estate, not even spooky trumps location.
Across the nation, former state hospitals for the mentally ill — with dated names like "lunatic asylum" — are being converted into homes.
Even the ominous Danvers State Hospital, once described as "the scariest building in the world" and a favorite destination of ghost-hunting thrill-seekers, soon will be home to laptop-toting latte drinkers.
"There's obviously a lot of notoriety associated with the site," said Scott Dale, a vice president at AvalonBay Communities Inc., which is constructing 497 luxury apartments and condominiums. "We think at the end of the day, that will be helpful."
No units are on the market yet, but Dale expressed confidence that occupancy won't be hurt by the property's jaded past, including a cemetery with some unmarked graves — one reminder of the sad history of treatment of the mentally ill.
The formula has been successful elsewhere.
Six hundred would-be buyers signed up for the first 60 homes built at the site of the former Dammasch State Hospital, a $500 million project in Wilsonville, Ore., 20 miles south of Portland, city officials said.
In Traverse City, Mich., developers of a former asylum overlooking Lake Michigan have down payments in hand from buyers looking for condos, and a waiting list should those bow out.
Rents at the 500-unit Octagon, the former New York City Lunatic Asylum on Manhattan's Roosevelt Island, are 10 percent higher than expected, developer Bruce Becker said. Studio apartments in the $170 million development start at $1,700.
"It certainly still has a slight mystery to it, but I wouldn't say scary or haunted," said Rebecca Shaw, who is moving with her boyfriend into a one-bedroom unit at the Octagon next month.
Built in 1841, the asylum later became a hospital, which closed in 1955. Trailblazing journalist Nellie Bly spent time undercover at the asylum and wrote in 1887 that it was a "human rat trap."
Shaw, who grew up on Roosevelt Island, recalled bicycling and roller-skating on the grounds.
"At that time it was weeds and bushes, overgrown plant life, which made it really cool," the 30-year-old social worker said. "For kids, that was part of the appeal, it was scary and spooky. When you get older you decipher what's real and what isn't."
What's real: parking space, short commute.
"For my work, I need to be close to the city. And the price is right for this point in my life," Shaw said.
The housing boom led developers to former mills, old schoolhouses, and now state hospitals. The mentally ill were thought to benefit from bucolic settings. The Danvers facility, opened in 1878 as the State Lunatic Hospital.
Eventually, many facilities closed and were left vacant as treatment moved away from overcrowded institutions in favor of smaller group homes.
Dale, the developer at Danvers, said AvalonBay is creating a "campus-like environment" with a swimming pool, WiFi cafe and fitness center. Rents will start around $1,400 for a one-bedroom, and about half-a-million dollars for a condo.
AvalonBay, since buying the property for $18 million late last year, has taken over security. In the past five years, Massachusetts State Police charged 150 people and issued warnings to an additional 450 people for trespassing, said spokesman Trooper Thomas R. Ryan.
Today, there's not much left for thrill-seekers. The main building is being renovated into 61 condos, but dozens of other structures are being bulldozed — over the objection of local preservationists.
"This is probably the worst preservation catastrophe that's ever happened in the town," said Richard Trask, Danvers' town archivist since the Nixon administration.
Still, developers can be sensitive. Web sites for the projects in New York, Oregon and Michigan make little or no mention of their properties' past use as asylums.
The Oregon project, named The Villebois to emulate the feel of European villages, will have townhouses starting at around $250,000.
"They had a psychic friend of theirs go through it and bless the spirits they thought were still hanging around," said Wilsonville Mayor Charlotte Lehan.