History of Riverview Hospital

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History of BC

History of BC

Күн бұрын

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@Taylod1
@Taylod1 5 ай бұрын
Huge mistake to close this facility, we need it more than ever now
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
I couldn’t agree more
@EskCan44
@EskCan44 5 ай бұрын
I agree. 2 years ago, I was in a bad state of mind and ended up staying in the psychiatric care ward in Surrey Memorial Hospital. I was in there for 12 days. It was an utterly horrendous experience. They never let you go outside. You were stuck inside, windows barred. Most windows didn't even open to allow fresh air in, resulting in a stale, dry enviornment. I can go on about what I saw in terms of staff behaviour, and some of the poor people who are trapped in that hell. Riverview seems like a heck of a healthier location for individuals struggling with mental health.
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
Yup. I grew up a couple of miles from Riverview/Essondale and my father and many people in Port Coquitlam worked there.
@MrMAC8964
@MrMAC8964 4 ай бұрын
they had a whole little community there for the folks . such a shame to close it . who makes these dumbass decisions ? like privatizing our provinces property .
@sewingpinz-s4j
@sewingpinz-s4j 4 ай бұрын
Yes. They did this all across Canada. There was a huge mental hospital in Brandon, Manitoba that employed a lot of health care workers, that closed at the same time. I guess the Government in its infinite wisdom thought it would be better for folks needing help to live on the streets. They need to reclaim those sites and build new treatment centres.
@Bull3tBikes
@Bull3tBikes 4 ай бұрын
Its a shame they closed down the mental health facilities en masse, now our public streets are an insane asylum
@melodymacken9788
@melodymacken9788 4 ай бұрын
Nicely said.
@charlesmclennan2173
@charlesmclennan2173 4 ай бұрын
someone thought it better they have the right to say no to treatment instead of getting better,what a farce
@1lisalopez
@1lisalopez 4 ай бұрын
So you don’t think the asbestos was a problem?
@timr.2257
@timr.2257 5 ай бұрын
We need to reopen it again.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
Agreed!
@Somethingaweful
@Somethingaweful 4 ай бұрын
Building looks old and dilapitated. Instead of reoponing it. We should just make a new and bigger facility!
@MrMAC8964
@MrMAC8964 4 ай бұрын
@@Somethingaweful at the same time tie it in with a rehab facility , a big one .
@lalani888ARTblue
@lalani888ARTblue 4 ай бұрын
It definitely needs to be re-opened but they'd need to gut it to remove all the asbestos. That procedure in itself would be extremely costly. The buildings should be preserved and Lord knows the many homeless Canadians struggling desperately need help and support. The government never should have closed these facilities and it truly shows Canadians that this was all by design. Canadians don't seem to innerstand that what we've been experiencing over the past four years was planned age's ago. Many people stereotype people with mental health challenges and addictions because they assume it will never be their own problem. It doesn't work that way. Hopefully we can get people the safety and healing they need 🙏✝️💚💌🇨🇦
@roberthoople
@roberthoople Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, almost nothing on the site is suitable for human habitation, so it can't just be re-opened. However, if our gov would get their own heads on straight, and finally make the big investments we need to finally tackle full-spectrum mental health in the provinces and country, it should be properly rebuilt for that purpose. I mean, I worked there a few times, and it is a truly beautiful place, with absolutely beautiful period buildings (if you ignore some of the history and the damning asylum designed interiors), so it was sad to see it all just rotting away, especially knowing what's going on in East Hastings and elsewhere. It was even more sad when I learned about what a biodiverse productive ecology that those grounds once were; they're still amazing for sure, but a lot has been lost. So, I dunno, if the whole place was completely re-imagined, with the right budget, with state-of-the-art modern facilities, proper infrastructure and a restoration of those grounds to their former glory, plus it was made accessible for all people on the mental illness spectrum (not just the insane or really ill), than I think it could become a modern masterpiece, and a flagship for mental health facilities all over. And the history and character of it doesn't have to (and shouldn't) be erased either. Even if a lot of the old buildings can't remain standing, the bricks and other elements of them should be preserved and used in the new buildings. Plus, to help preserve even more of the history of the place, the gov could work with the film industry, in a collaborative project, to preserve and restore some of the older buildings, to their authentic original provenance, and use them part time for historical tours and part time to continue to be valuable film and television locations. The upgrades could even include (and hidden) installations of proper power and other infrastructure that would making filming there more economical, so win-win.
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
Riverview was a part of my childhood when it was called Essondale then. My father worked there, I took YMCA lessons in the indoor swimming pool, visited with other children living in one of the employees homes, etc. Plus my Russian grandfather who I never met, died at Colony Farm from a kidney disease that affected his brain. It's too bad the buildings were full of asbestos as their exteriors was beautiful. Then there was the terrible decision to greatly reduce facilities for people with mental illness, to put them on 'better' drugs so they could live more independent lives away from the hospital.... to then end up struggling without enough support. We all know what has happened since.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story
@annapee2367
@annapee2367 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for this I didn’t realize that Riverview and Essondale were the same place.
@dreamboards1056
@dreamboards1056 4 ай бұрын
I worked there in the 90s. An absolute shame that this sanctuary is not 3 times bigger now than it ever was.
@pbufh
@pbufh 4 ай бұрын
Did you torture people?
@dreamboards1056
@dreamboards1056 4 ай бұрын
@@pbufh your gonna have to explain why you would ask such a stupid fucking question.
@dreamboards1056
@dreamboards1056 4 ай бұрын
@@pbufh explain why you would ask that. Are you an idiot?
@dreamboards1056
@dreamboards1056 4 ай бұрын
@@pbufh please explain why you would ask that. I can't wait to hear.
@dreamboards1056
@dreamboards1056 4 ай бұрын
@@pbufh did you fall on your head as a kid?
@minimaxmiaandme.4971
@minimaxmiaandme.4971 4 ай бұрын
Should have stayed open, would help a lot of people now....same with Ponoka outside of Edmonton, had beautiful grounds and a healing nature. Family member spent time there and he said he liked it being so isolated and full of green space.
@guymontag2948
@guymontag2948 4 ай бұрын
I remember visiting a friend when he was a patient there in the late 90s. It was such a beautiful, peaceful place and my friend seemed happy and well cared for. I remember hanging out in a smoking room where you lit your cigarette by putting the end in a hole in the wall and pressing a button.
@grgj1951
@grgj1951 4 ай бұрын
It's a shame all the outdoor therapeutic activities were lost. There is nowhere I can think of where that is provided. Activities are a huge benefit in healing mental health.
@kameronb
@kameronb 4 ай бұрын
The history of woodlands and the courthouse of New West would be great stories. This was great as my grandfather used to be a cook at Essendale in the 50s and 60s.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Woodlands will be a future video. I will look into the courthouse. Sounds interesting. Thanks for watching.
@mainguy5387
@mainguy5387 4 ай бұрын
I live in BC and did some carpentry work for an older Irish couple who were nurses at Riverview. They said that after its closure they could recognize some of their ex-patients on the streets of Hastings, even years later. ---- Today certain political parties are promoting 'safe supply' without an emphasis on rehab, and the mentally ill see no improvement. I have hope that healing institutions like Riverview will have a resurgence once we kick out stupid selfish leaders. We pay so much damn taxes in BC that better go to helping the least fortunate effectively.
@sam76861
@sam76861 4 ай бұрын
Worked here in the early 2000’s in East Lawn. It always creeped me out working night shift. Beautiful grounds. They never should have closed down. They needed to refurbish it and keep it open.
@kenneth7027
@kenneth7027 4 ай бұрын
This clears up much of my confusion . I had several relatives on staff there and one frequent patient. They patients were abandoned to live in fifth and misery, noone to follow them up with medication and shelter. The culprit? Greed and politicians!
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Poor decisions were made for sure. It was a safe place for them. Closing it without a better solution to deal with those in need was a mistake. Thanks for watching!
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
@@HistoryOfBritishColumbia Thanks for making this video. I think it's going to get a lot of views as it's going to bring up memories for many of us.
@dlo111
@dlo111 4 ай бұрын
I clearly remember when this closed. Many people were against it's closure, happened anyway. It seems like it would have been a great institution, especially since therapeutic treatments were the usual.
@GGTanguera
@GGTanguera 4 ай бұрын
Holiwood North 😢
@DevonPerez-k1c
@DevonPerez-k1c 4 ай бұрын
I have worked in film for 15 years and have filmed at Riverview more times than I can recall with the first show being Man in the High Castle. I have never experienced anything super natural or ghostly but I can understand how empty disused places have that "creepy energy". I know some harsh practices went down their but their limited understanding of mental health lead to unfortunate experimentation. People with mental health disorders had a place to be cared for as much as the eras allowed. I personally love Riverview and its beautiful grounds.
@sacred7192
@sacred7192 4 ай бұрын
My sister Kodi worked on Man in the High Castle too :)
@maryrankin9869
@maryrankin9869 4 ай бұрын
This land should be returned to the mentally ill and the movie industry needs to go. Our streets are a disgrace. We need a modern day facility now and yesterday.
@DevonPerez-k1c
@DevonPerez-k1c 4 ай бұрын
While I agree that the land should be used for a place to support the mental health industry unfortunately the buildings are so loaded with lead and asbestos that they are too unsafe to even tear down. The buildings are safe to film in as long as nothing is structurally disturbed. May as well use the space and bring attention to the issues, which this video has done. It is my understanding that there are some buildings on the north side of the property that are new and are used for supporting the mental health industry, there needs to be more however and that is down to governmental decision making.
@GreatBoneStructure
@GreatBoneStructure 4 ай бұрын
I know film caterers who worked there for many years who made a point of slipping in and making spooky noises when they were on breaks. The creepiest part is the tunnels connecting the buildings underground IMHO. If the ghosts don't get you the asbestos will.
@wendyr8107
@wendyr8107 4 ай бұрын
My son is on set there on shows alot, I need to ask him if he’s seen anything creepy
@the6ig6adwolf
@the6ig6adwolf 5 ай бұрын
My uncle worked at Riverview as a chef/cook in the late 80s and early 90s, and he would tell us kids creepy stories about the tunnels under the compound.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing and watching!
@Bull3tBikes
@Bull3tBikes 4 ай бұрын
Any details?
@Noahidebc
@Noahidebc 4 ай бұрын
I would love to hear those stories.
@flound3rpuss362
@flound3rpuss362 4 ай бұрын
I have been down there when I was working in film... definitely not somewhere you want to be alone.
@Dakiniwoman
@Dakiniwoman 4 ай бұрын
Wow... I did not know of the tunnels below Riverview... Yes, dreadful things happened at Riverview... My sister was a victim/patient there.
@TonyZEHS
@TonyZEHS 4 ай бұрын
drive pass the buildings quite often. great to know about the hustory and the interior/aerial view of the place!
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@ewannoelkailevi4772
@ewannoelkailevi4772 4 ай бұрын
Nice video. Appreciated the drone footage showing the place I worked at for almost 2 decades. Kinda weird actually. Fun and important fact, Riverview is something like the second oldest horticultural garden in canada. There's mature, old trees that are very rare and is a the foundation of the tree walk that used to happen all the time. Trees imported from asia etc. if you walk around east lawn for example the grand old trees will have brass placards with information on them. This is one of the main reasons why the Riverview grounds haven't been expropriated more .. because the grounds is a huge green space that the city and developers are salivating to claim as a huge income and tax base. In addition to the aboriginal angle. Lastly, rehabbing the buildings for mental health or other purposes would almost be unfathomable requiring incredible political will and finances. But not impossible. Lastly, it was Gordon Campbell and his Liberals that functionally closed down Riverview. You can blame him. It was sad and tough time to go through.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching and your insight :)
@codyreber8370
@codyreber8370 4 ай бұрын
Ive spent literally weeks filming shows there. People say the upper floors of crease unit are haunted but ive had naps up there. No problems.
@Maxxis1941
@Maxxis1941 4 ай бұрын
There was a very practical reason Riverview was shut down: it was falling apart, plumbing was disintegrating, electrical was outdated by decades (huge fire hazard), walls were collapsing, ceilings were weakening and it was an asbestos death trap. Fixing and/or tearing down and rebuilding would have cost the BC taxpayers 100s of millions of dollars. The Feds were handing out money to build new and smaller "de-institutionalization" facilities while using medications. I've filmed at Riverview hundreds of times over a long film career. There's only 3 buildings we're allowed to film in and only in certain parts (I've been in some of the DO NOT ENTER buildings and they're ready to fall down with the next wind storm - terrifying). When I first filmed there in the early 90's, it was bad. Now 35yrs later with no remediation work done, Riverview is a death trap. Some film crews refuse to go inside for (a not unrealistic) fear that the roof will fall on their heads. Many productions are using Riverview only for exterior shots. All that said, in recent years the BC gov't has been seen surveying the buildings and marking out where new buildings would go. The province has also talked publicly about rebuilding Riverview, so it's not a secret but you can be damn sure it won't start/be finished for a LONG time.
@AI-Assist-2024
@AI-Assist-2024 3 ай бұрын
Yeah but now they are spending billions of dollars handing out opioid drugs to people that need care instead of being out on the street. And it’s gotten to the point that people who are overdosing are clogging up the healthcare system. Where did you learn math? At film school?
@minunucat
@minunucat 4 ай бұрын
My great grandmother went there and was given shock therapy for her epilepsy. Although our medical system has come a long way it’s also reverted to an unhealthy way of dealing with mental health. Places like this need to be given another look. Too many on the streets that are now right offs
@maryrankin9869
@maryrankin9869 4 ай бұрын
We treat our pets better.
@brendawheeler1543
@brendawheeler1543 4 ай бұрын
My grandma was tortured there as welll 😢
@user-op9mv5lq1u
@user-op9mv5lq1u 4 ай бұрын
Electroshock therapy damaged my aunt
@nala2839
@nala2839 4 ай бұрын
@@user-op9mv5lq1u electro convulsions therapy saved my life. Sorry about your grandma
@newcoyote
@newcoyote Ай бұрын
I study dendrology (trees) and live near it. To this day, it is an absolute gold mine for studying trees. There are very good specimens and a large variety. Even if you're not focused on trees, it is still worth paying attention to the arboretum aspect if you visit. Thank you to the uploader for including this part. Awareness in needed to help preserve it. Very good essay.
@inlangford
@inlangford 4 ай бұрын
Imagine having 24 hour care in a peaceful environment dedicated to your mental health..
@boycub
@boycub 4 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the video doesn't go into the vast history of abuse and SA against patients. Favoritism amongst patients was a thing. Some had it okay. Some were in hell.
@Chanel31113
@Chanel31113 5 ай бұрын
Please do the Tranquille Sanitorium “Padova” in Kamloops, BC. I am really interested in the underground tunnels and houses in Padova City too.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
This is definitely on my list of future projects. Thanks for watching
@gardenmice2516
@gardenmice2516 4 ай бұрын
One thing this video is missing, is the fact that there are multiple mental health and rehabilitation centers that still operate on the riverview grounds. They even opened a brand new facility only a couple years ago.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Yes, the Red Fish Healing Centre opened recently on the grounds. I did consider mentioning it, but since it isn't affiliated with the original Riverview Hospital I chose to not mention it. Thank you for bringing it up in the comments though :)
@pm6613
@pm6613 4 ай бұрын
Hollywood Hospital in New Westminster became a shopping Mall at 6th and 6th. It was a world-renowned mental care facility using experimental psychedelics therapy, eventually banished by big pharma.
@JodiAmanda
@JodiAmanda 4 ай бұрын
This is a really interesting video. Thank you for sharing. After watching a bunch of Jon Levi videos about old-world architecture being discovered and repurposed rather than built, whenever I look at old brick buildings, I question the narrative we're given. Does it make sense that this beautiful brick building was built from 1909 - 1913 in a remote area with what ... horse and buggy? Or was it initially discovered and repurposed? The original use of this space to support health with hydrotherapy, massage, safe care and peaceful surroundings, healthy food, recreation, work, and a normal routine sounds amazing. I bet they were far more effective at helping people when "mental illness was not well understood at the time and little could be done to treat patients." It sounds like they were far wiser than we are now that we "know" so much.
@cwp2580
@cwp2580 4 ай бұрын
Now we have the worlds largest outdoor insane asylum... the downtown eastside
@barontaylor7139
@barontaylor7139 4 ай бұрын
Downtown Nanaimo and downtown Victoria as well
@Bull3tBikes
@Bull3tBikes 4 ай бұрын
Its spread all over the lower mainland at this point
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
@@Bull3tBikes I'd say all over the province. Thx.
@Bull3tBikes
@Bull3tBikes 4 ай бұрын
@@sbaumgartner9848 Yep unfortunately the only place you wont find those tent dwellers is in the woods..where tents belong, they stay close to urban areas to keep close to thier drug supply.
@minunucat
@minunucat 4 ай бұрын
Yup the Island
@FaithArnold-gk7tv
@FaithArnold-gk7tv 4 ай бұрын
I wish they would restore it …. So beautiful
@billanominous7979
@billanominous7979 4 ай бұрын
My grandfather was there in 1902 .There was only three people there at that time Dr.Creese ,Dr Essen, and my grandfather.My grandfather retired in 1957 as superententant of stores
@albatross1779
@albatross1779 4 ай бұрын
My grandmother apparently used to work there, so thanks for this. Apparently she also found what would become her family's dog wandering the grounds there.
@xelaettequd
@xelaettequd 4 ай бұрын
Love the channel man. Hoping you do some videos about Vancouver Island. Keep up the good work
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you! I have a couple ideas for videos based on the Island. Stay tuned!
@FanciDreama
@FanciDreama 22 күн бұрын
Thank you for the amazing and informative video. I would love to see a video about Woodlands School in New Westminster that you mentioned. Now that the buildings are gone, it's hard to find details on it online. it's sad that it's forgotten now. It was also used to shoot movies and TV shows.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 21 күн бұрын
Thank you! I do have plans for a video on Woodlands in the near future. Stay tuned!
@Padraigan13
@Padraigan13 4 ай бұрын
My Mom took her Psych Nursing training there; my Dad worked at Colony Farm. They met and the rest is history. I would love to see the buildings put to good use.
@izikavazo
@izikavazo 4 ай бұрын
Very interesting stuff! You have tons of topics, I'm sure, but I'd love to hear about the history of Britannia Beach and Mount Shear. Dramatic stuff has happened there, plus the scale of that mine is unfathomable.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Britannia was actually one of my first subjects I worked on. I have half of it scripted so far but abandoned it for some reason. It’s a video that I do want to finish and this comment will motivate me to complete it! Thank you
@annapee2367
@annapee2367 4 ай бұрын
Fascinating video. Thank you
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you :)
@Northern-ru
@Northern-ru 5 ай бұрын
So pumped to watch this. I wait for your videos once a month!
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@TraciesLocalLearnings
@TraciesLocalLearnings 4 ай бұрын
I did my practicum there 1999-2000 The tunnels are super creepy lined with what looked like jail cells. There was still Alot of abuse which we reported to our college, Shortly after they no longer sent students there. Prayers for all who have passed through those doors 🙏
@freeplayfrank7736
@freeplayfrank7736 4 ай бұрын
Great video thanks. I know people who worked there, and were patients there but never knew the history of it, very interesting thanks.
@stephenlanegraff4574
@stephenlanegraff4574 4 ай бұрын
Excellent video! My mom use to work there as a nurse. Wish you could have gone inside. I've seen some things as a young kid when I went to see my mom.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thanks you very much
@Bull3tBikes
@Bull3tBikes 4 ай бұрын
Any details?
@haymondd
@haymondd 5 ай бұрын
Great vid! Riverview also held a psychiatric nursing school and some long term housing for patients. Can't post this to facebook for some reason. I get this message "Your message couldn't be sent because it includes content that other people on Facebook have reported as abusive."
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Very odd about not being able to share.
@ConfusedWonkie
@ConfusedWonkie 4 ай бұрын
It’s a beautiful place even now but sadly some buildings have had the cellings fall in on themselves but the rest is still gorgeous. Hope they restore it
@susanfifer5744
@susanfifer5744 4 ай бұрын
Yes we should of never closed this , look at the state of Bc , people need help more than ever
@jenn-k-h
@jenn-k-h 4 ай бұрын
As someone born and raised here in BC, I'm loving these videos!! I was going to suggest Massey Tunnel, but see you have one already 😊 Maybe the Iron Workers Bridge? Or the McBarge 😏
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you! Iron workers is planned and I've already completed droning the McBarge :)
@jenn-k-h
@jenn-k-h 4 ай бұрын
@@HistoryOfBritishColumbia Lol, perfect 😏🙌
@margretsims1322
@margretsims1322 4 ай бұрын
My Brother was born the day the Ironworkers Bridge fell down; my Mother recalled Burnaby Hospital was in chaos that day. Sadly he died in 1969.....
@mattsvhe
@mattsvhe 4 ай бұрын
great videos, glad I found this channel
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you! I'm glad you enjoy them.
@Elizabeth-vw1vb
@Elizabeth-vw1vb 4 ай бұрын
I remember when the long term care was canceled and all the shufflers and mumblers were put out on the streets. Tragic.
@JimEatsPlants
@JimEatsPlants 4 ай бұрын
This was an interesting video, though I would have liked to hear about the patient abuse here, the presented information didn't get into the problems with the facility.
@JimEatsPlants
@JimEatsPlants 4 ай бұрын
the comments below your video reaffirm this issue, everyone seems to assume it was all wonderful and just closed to save money. You mentioned ghost stories, but why would these stories exist if not for people being abused there? Anyone interested in more information could start with this video: YNbVdOwt4BU
@James-ti6df
@James-ti6df 4 ай бұрын
Good video it’s a shame they closed this hospital. The politicians don’t have the balls to open up a place like this again.
@pennyvere1624
@pennyvere1624 3 ай бұрын
My mother lived in the nurses residence during her time achieving her psychiatric nursing degree. She worked many years in nursing and eventually became Director of Recreation and painted Pennington Hall pink. Her name was Rosa. She retired in 1988. I spent allot of time at Pennington Hall as a child, interacting with the residence.
@jodywhitehead9173
@jodywhitehead9173 4 ай бұрын
I worked in a back ward where, mostly long term residents, with dementia or traumatic brain injuries were cared for. Most had to be fed, bathed, dressed. The head nurse was a supreme disciplinarian. Everything had to be spotless, no slacking off and she demanded our wards be treated with respect. If you weren't providing care you were swinging a mop. The long term staff had the patience of saints to deal with the patients, most of whom struggled, screamed, and fought when we provided care. When the decision to close it was made the mantra was that smaller community based homes would provide better outcomes. The problem was of course NIMBY, and, inadequate funding. Instead most wound upon the streets where their life was incredibly hard, exacerbated by not receiving reliable doses of their psychoactive medications. On top of everything else they became prey to street thugs.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
Plus one province follows another, one western country follows another until it represents the new norm across western countries. Shameful.
@marylaczko6539
@marylaczko6539 4 ай бұрын
Wrong the problem WASN'T NIMBY. These places were in the country, away from the cities. The actual problem was greed, and gov't ineptitude. Its expensive to build and run large institutions. We're now finding ou,t that it's even more costly, NOT to.
@georgemacleod9808
@georgemacleod9808 4 ай бұрын
To privatize, you have a well running public entity, that serves the citizen's; the funding and support are pulled to make it impossible to operate! Either it is sold to private for profit corporation, or close it completely!
@2394098234509
@2394098234509 4 ай бұрын
Excellent video
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it
@ruthlarson6334
@ruthlarson6334 4 ай бұрын
And this is why we are where we are with our mental health challenges today.
@bryceburgart8544
@bryceburgart8544 4 ай бұрын
Awesome as always Kish! Great video
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thanks Nugz!
@couch-m5j
@couch-m5j 4 ай бұрын
It was interesting/terrifying as a kid when the alarm would go off when a patient escaped. Moms racing down the streets to gather their kids. Babysitting anywhere that backed into the woods was interesting/terrifying. The grounds were beautiful at both Woodlands and Riverview. One of the buildings you knew was for the extra special ones, nasty horrible criminals beyond help. But it was a great place to have. Now we have almost nothing. Build these places and staff them. I don't know how to do it or else I would.
@lisa-marieneufeld7146
@lisa-marieneufeld7146 4 ай бұрын
My Dad's little sister died in this hostpital at the age of 10..
@sincerewyd2285
@sincerewyd2285 4 ай бұрын
I used to work at riverveiw hospital, i was a janitor for the moving film industry. The basements rooms, more like tunnels inside the west building. We have heard a female scream from the top floor, which we werent allowed to go to. Only floor 1 2 3 and the basement were allowed to enter.. iam first nations and have been feeling entities in that place the whole time..
@zaz214
@zaz214 4 ай бұрын
Great channel man! Keep em comin.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Thank you! I appreciate it
@hoboonwheels9289
@hoboonwheels9289 4 ай бұрын
Alberta Hospital on the NE corner of Edmonton is in the state Riverview was in, some newer buildings, the older ones still stand, vacant. The political move across the country started rampant homelessness with no place for people who need it. Alberta Hospital held 1500 and now treats 400, with most buildings being offices, 2nd offices for many. "Antipsychotic" medication is merely sedatives, they should be on high fat moderate protein diets for best recovery, hospital food is mostly carbs, no wonder people never get healthy.
@ShawnWalker-jv1rg
@ShawnWalker-jv1rg 5 ай бұрын
As someone who lived in the area. This was just pain wrong. All to save about 25 million/yr. A relative was the head of housekeeping at Crease Clinic. It was a very underpaid gig.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 5 ай бұрын
It should never have closed. I used to volunteer there in my teens and have fond memories of the patients and staff.
@ConfusedWonkie
@ConfusedWonkie 4 ай бұрын
Although I understand it was closed probably cuz these kinds of hospitals tend to have a bit of abuse, I wished they revamped it. It would be a great place for modern mental health professionals to work and provide proper care.
@Dakiniwoman
@Dakiniwoman 4 ай бұрын
They gave my sister Electric Shock treatments at Riverview... They made her take off her 18K gold earrings (that she had borrowed from me) while they did the shock therapy... She never got the earrings back... Yes, the nurses stole from the "mentally ill" patients... My sister was "crazy" so no one investigated the theft. I do agree that there was a great need for mental health Hospitals. When they closed down Riverview... all those patients had no where to go and many ended up as the "homeless" on the streets of Vancouver. Shameful!
@klattalexis
@klattalexis 3 ай бұрын
My mother had shock treatments there too!
@georgemacleod9808
@georgemacleod9808 4 ай бұрын
What I remember was , in the 60's the talk of reducing Riverview. The shock by staff by the lack of communication by the politicians of the time. There was no one in government that knew why Riverview was needed , there was no respect for staff input. To put it simply; it is probably the biggest renoviction in Canada! They built a motel like building, started placing residents there; if they could make instant coffee and toast; they were put out in the street.
@jayb4779
@jayb4779 4 ай бұрын
My mom was a nurse there for 25 years . I been there several times , had naps on the wards hahaha ate in the cafeteria
@susiehowey4141
@susiehowey4141 4 ай бұрын
I’ve worked on several of the productions filmed there. The air around there is very heavy. You can without a doubt feel the negative energy that resides there. (The fact that there is still a working morgue in North Lawn doesn’t help) there is also a jail and a crematorium there. It’s not a nice place. The film Liason took a colleague and I on a “forbidden” tour. It was chilling. There’s a dark windowless room that was reserved for funeral services for a tiny gathering of family (maybe big enough for 6-8 people) there are underground tunnels that connect the buildings. There’s a sad little cemetery… it’s a dreadful place really.
@dvolonino
@dvolonino 4 ай бұрын
I, too, have worked multiple times on a production shot there. There is definitely something off putting in certain parts of the buildings.
@alwayscuriousalwayslearnin
@alwayscuriousalwayslearnin 4 ай бұрын
I am almost positively thinking that the homless populations, drug addiction, crime rates ,including violent crime rates significantly increased not only in Vancouver but also Surrey were do to the closure of Riverview, I knew a few people that worked there who all told me the same thing that many of the people released shouldn't have been released many were harmful to society as well as to themselves, all of that just after Riverview closed the whole ghost things well I have been told a few stories from the people that worked there a;; said it was mostly that feeling of being watched and weird other things not one of those people said they have actually seen anything, it was just that energy because of all those people there and that energy probably would stay there. the feeling of walking into a room after an argument, but everyone is smiling you can feel it .
@sammcturk8898
@sammcturk8898 3 ай бұрын
You are right just remember this when you considered voting conservative that's who did it and they also complain the most about the completely foreseeable problems it's caused
@coryharry7300
@coryharry7300 3 ай бұрын
I worked downtown in '92 (Granville & Hastings area) when large portions of Riverview closed and there were mentally ill people on the streets immediately after that, it was a very noticeable change.
@ShaunaSoulFireDance
@ShaunaSoulFireDance 4 ай бұрын
Colony Farm is operating again with a new facility for forensic psychiatric care. It is mostly for people with mental health conditions or concurrent disorders (mental health and substance use issues) and who are found not criminally responsible or have complex mental health conditions which cause them to be unable to stand trial. While there were issues and abuses in institutional care, many people had supports they needed, and connected with community, a loss many experience in the greater community.
@rttires
@rttires 4 ай бұрын
Very Informative Video H.o.B.C.
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
Much appreciated!
@jennifercave896
@jennifercave896 4 ай бұрын
The horror stories alleging a culture of abuse were the reason it was closed
@budmcneely1571
@budmcneely1571 4 ай бұрын
we need the ability to provide asylum for challenged people again.
@user-st6nt4ou6f
@user-st6nt4ou6f 4 ай бұрын
The old expression " threw the baby out with the bathwater" comes to mind. Not so apt but only thing I can think of. Greed and disinterest by governments contributed to closures like this all over the US! The homeless population is a dramatic example of one effect of these closures. Dumped out with no place to go.
@diamonminer1803
@diamonminer1803 4 ай бұрын
And the government of that day felt, and the government of today still somehow feel, that leaving people with serious mental health issues (those who can't properly care for themselves), to their own devices, is better than having these facilities operational.
@VancouverVince
@VancouverVince 4 ай бұрын
Phantom dog haunting Riverview!?!!? LOL Awesome!! 🐶🐶🐶
@FaithArnold-gk7tv
@FaithArnold-gk7tv 4 ай бұрын
When I worked on set of GodZilla there were staff members complaining of a dog running the halls of the tuberculosis unit…… we also had to Cut filming for a bit because there was a metal door in the floor above us slamming shut over and over again. Security didn’t find anyone on the upper floors, super spooky. 😅
4 ай бұрын
My late Aunt Laura Powell was in Riverview when it was known as Essondale. Now that I’m older I better understand the pain it must have caused my mum when we went to visit.
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
My heart goes out to your mother and all family members affected by having loved ones there. Essondale was a major part of my life as a kid. My father worked there as a psychiatric nurse, just like others from Poco did. I took YMCA swimming lessons in the indoor pool there, played with kids whose parents had homes there, etc. My grandfather died at Colony Farm during the depression; he had a kidney disease that went to his brain.
4 ай бұрын
@@sbaumgartner9848 Thank you for your kind words and sharing your experiences. My aunt eventually left and went home, but I’m sure many folks didn’t.
@FordManiac76
@FordManiac76 4 ай бұрын
They even had a bank on site that my aunt worked at!
@anti6394
@anti6394 4 ай бұрын
keep it up the good work
@deirdrecaskenette5473
@deirdrecaskenette5473 4 ай бұрын
When I shared a house with other young people (in 1976) a Riverview patient came over to Victoria to be part of a chess tournament. One of the young men in our group had invited him. Same fellow thought it would be funny for the patient to visit me and enjoy my female company! I spent the whole night leaning on my door to thwart entry. I was scared!
@sharonmcleese3051
@sharonmcleese3051 4 ай бұрын
I know of several younger patients from Riverdale that ended up in long-term care facilities where they terrorized the elderly residents till they violently attacked staff and / or residents before being removed to secure units. The innocent and most vulnerable payed dearly for these people being placed in noisy busy environments that increased their psychosis. Failure to care was turning these poor souls on the street and a black mark on our province. Retired gerontology RN
@maryrankin9869
@maryrankin9869 4 ай бұрын
Imagine the movie industry ...instead of taking care of our mentally ill...reopen a modern day facility for our most vulnerable society. We now need long term detox and long term treatment. We can do this. We just need some leadership.
@lewispaine4589
@lewispaine4589 4 ай бұрын
I had an uncle who spent some time there, he claimed they gave him lsd and made him watch porn, and gauged his reactions. He could have been lying, as he was prone to do, but I'da know. He was kind of a pervert, but he could have been made so by his experiences there.I'll never know, God rest your soul Uncle Jim, you were a riot, Christmas was never the same without you. Merry X-Mas, General ! you used to say, Good times!
@Snarkonymous
@Snarkonymous 4 ай бұрын
Yep. It was the socreds that shut it down in the 80's
@vancguy9204
@vancguy9204 4 ай бұрын
They didn't close Riverview - they just moved it onto our buses.
@sbaumgartner9848
@sbaumgartner9848 4 ай бұрын
Very true. The decision-makers get paid to have no accountability while the taxpayer and those with mental health problems pay the price.
@MR-cz7fn
@MR-cz7fn 4 ай бұрын
It was absolutely criminal what they did with the poor people that were there. They just turned them all onto the streets and did nothing to help them. SICKENING GOV always sickening Gov doing this shit and think of the so-called doctors that allowed this. The people in charge should have been jailed for this.
@stevie6951
@stevie6951 3 ай бұрын
Agreed.
@Elizabeth-rq1vi
@Elizabeth-rq1vi 4 ай бұрын
Growing up we’d use Essendale as a slur only knowing it was mental illness place…didn’t have a clue where it was and now I know. We need a place for our severely mentally ill that is secure, safe and a calm space. Residential & outpatient..
@charlesmclennan2173
@charlesmclennan2173 4 ай бұрын
needed now on a big scale as the tsunami of ill is massive
@IronChefPeter
@IronChefPeter 4 ай бұрын
You can thank the film “one flew over the coocoos nest” as to why places like this are not arround anymore. I guess our society decided that drug den hotels downtown are a better place for people suffering from mental illnesses than hospitals like this.
@bl1707
@bl1707 4 ай бұрын
Was Molnar developments (that bought 141 acres of Riverview's lands from the Provincial Government) owned by Andre Molnar?
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia
@HistoryOfBritishColumbia 4 ай бұрын
From their website it says he still owns it. molnargroup.com/our-team/
@countrygirl4213
@countrygirl4213 4 ай бұрын
Two great aunts were nurses there in the late 40's to 70's.they never wanted to really talk about anything.Labotamy's were big then.
@Blt-rr2lm
@Blt-rr2lm 4 ай бұрын
The Charter of Rights. Turn them loose and hope for the best. Probably the biggest mistake in health care history. The making of One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest didn’t help either. The majority of homeless are mentally ill, and or traumatized. I hope there will be a politician with the guts to review this policy and get people the health they need.
@nala2839
@nala2839 4 ай бұрын
Nope the majority of homeless people aren’t incapacitated by mental illness. Most if not all have mental illness like we all do.
@martemacdougall1985
@martemacdougall1985 4 ай бұрын
I remember when it was called "Essondale" Anyone know when the name was changed? A relative spent time there in an isolated building for "the criminally violent and insane" I heard it was a HORRIBLE place and that is why they shut it down. Psychiatric and psychological awareness has certainly grown and improved. Perhaps it's a financial problem now. 🤔 One of the commentors said that asbestos was a factor?
@jan-margaret6970
@jan-margaret6970 4 ай бұрын
It's was called gov' t expansion . 🇨🇦🪶
@StevenLum-v3z
@StevenLum-v3z 4 ай бұрын
They need to reopen this place. But I guess they still think there out patient program is working 🤔
@SteveBibby-p4h
@SteveBibby-p4h 4 ай бұрын
My great uncl died at Essondale..The BC Provincal Governerment will not allow archival information..85 years later! Even now, we cannnot lay him to rest
@annapee2367
@annapee2367 4 ай бұрын
How sad we no longer have facilities for those in need. We waste so much money now on things that just don’t make a difference and don’t even get me started on the free drugs
@daniellefielding924
@daniellefielding924 4 ай бұрын
One can only imagine the horrors that happened there.
@HollyGW
@HollyGW 4 ай бұрын
My grandma worked there
@2ndLife2025
@2ndLife2025 4 ай бұрын
This video didn’t touch on the absolute atrocities that occurred to patients by staff, and that’s one of the main reasons it was shut down. Patients were repeatedly sexually, physically, and mentally abused by their so called “caregivers”. Many were gang raped. Patients were brutally beaten, burned, drugged to death, given lobotomies, cut to death…the list goes on. This went on for years. I’m amazed you could make a video like this almost glorifying this hell space. It doesn’t give the patients any justice. Watch the documentaries that were produced to see how much more damaged the patients became after being sent to this place. They suffered all kinds of abuse and were drugged so much that they couldn’t speak to their families about it. Those that said anything to their loved ones were killed by staff (their abusers). Secret cameras were brought in by families who caught the abuse and they sued River View. Then the place shut down. The gov barely offered a decent apology and reparations to the survivors and families that lost loved ones. It was a total shit show!
@nala2839
@nala2839 4 ай бұрын
Well welcome to any asylum. They all abuse patients
@surfingmoose
@surfingmoose 4 ай бұрын
Should never have come to this. It should be expanded. Where it is situated is also great in helping people heal or live in relative peace.
@stevejones924
@stevejones924 4 ай бұрын
Site of many North Hollywood movies/tv.
@DLWELD
@DLWELD 4 ай бұрын
LOL the civil service saved some money by closing the hospital, but now we all share the costs of having so many mental patients inhabiting the down towns of most BC cities and towns. Folks with mental problems are now on their own - street drugs, crime, muggings > good work! whomever you are who saved us all that provincial budget money.
@izmir2004
@izmir2004 4 ай бұрын
My parents worked there
@path1400
@path1400 4 ай бұрын
Why can't BC put the homeless on the old Riverveiw hospital buidings. Turn the building into small apartments or just rooms.
@darvell.
@darvell. 4 ай бұрын
lol, now these days i take my dog there for training. how times have changed
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