Park Prewett Hospital, also known as Park Prewett Mental Hospital, was a psychiatric hospital northwest of Basingstoke, in the county of Hampshire in England, which operated from 1917 until 1997. The hospital was designed by the noted asylum architect George T. Hine.
The land on which Park Prewett Hospital stands was originally part of the Park Prewett Farm. Park Prewett was an enclosure dating back to the time of Edward I. The Farm occupied a triangle bounded to the south by the A339, to the east by the A340 and on the north west by Rooksdown Lane, the old Roman road.
Following a report by the lunacy commission into overcrowding at Knowle in the south of the county, a new site was required to house the expanding population. Park Prewett Farm was then acquired in 1899 and plans drawn up by Hine's firm, Hine and Pegg. The scheme was then postponed as the number of patients at Knowle Hospital had declined. In 1910, it was agreed that building work would start at Park Prewett in 1912. Work was well advanced by 1914 when war broke out.
Due to the intervention of the first world war, labour was short, but it was completed in 1917. The building was first used by the Canadians as a military convalescent hospital until 1919 - It was known as ‘Number Four Canadian General Hospital’. Park Prewett opened as a mental hospital in 1921 and by 1936 catered for 1,400 patients. The hospital returned to military use again during World War II. Part of the hospital - Rooksdown House - was used by Sir Harold Gillies, the pioneering plastic surgeon. It was originally the private wing of the Asylum but became a plastic surgery unit in 1940.
The hospital was served by its own railway line from 1913 until 1954 from a junction on the South Western Main Line 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Basingstoke railway station.
The hospital boundary was planted with a double row of trees forming a series of avenues with footpaths along the middle. This shelter belt is largely intact and shows the extent of the old hospital grounds.
Park Prewett was bought by English Partnerships in 2005. They have licensed developers Taylor Woodrow for most new building on the site, and Thomas Homes for conversion of many of the old hospital blocks into housing and community facilities. The new housing development was called "Limes Park" and formed the core of a new civil parish named Rooksdown.
In the late 1990s, after the hospital was abandoned it was sometimes put to other uses: The hospital's hall was used as a rave venue.
Famous quotes containing the words park and/or hospital:
“Therefore awake! make haste, I say,
And let us, without staying,
All in our gowns of green so gay
Into the Park a-maying!”
—Unknown. Sister, Awake! (L. 912)
“The sun his hand uncloses like a statue,
Irrevocably: thereby such light is freed
That all the dingy hospital of snow
Dies back to ditches.”
—Philip Larkin (19221986)