Central State of Mind

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concept paper Updated from Oct. 2009 Whitepaper Bluesky LLC central state of mind pathology to health : re-imagining : land use | culture | community Re-envisioning the grounds of the former Central State Hospital for the Insane, Indianapolis

description

Concept Paper: A re-envisioning of the grounds of the former Central State Hospital for the Insane in Indianapolis

Transcript of Central State of Mind

Page 1: Central State of Mind

concept paper Updated from Oct. 2009Whitepaper Bluesky LLC

centralstate of mind pathology to health

: re-imagining :land use | culture | community

Re-envisioning the grounds of the former Central State Hospital for the Insane, Indianapolis

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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>PRESENT

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INSPIRING PLACES

Inspiring Past + Present

what are they?

SEEN

Once Inspiring, Now Blight:

depression without patients

SEEN + UNSEEN

Mental Math

the usefulness of ghosts

CONCEPT

Deconstructing the Gem

a culturally creative vision

UNSEEN

Anomalies and Pathologies

can brains in jars save us from an uninspiring future?

AFTERWORD

The Road Taken

greening the ghosts

contents

5

4

2

1

3 6

prologueFUTURE

PAST>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

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Inspiring PlacesCentral State Hospital for the Insane, shown in this illustration, was not to be mistaken for

a small empire, or, as a 1920 aerial photo-graph seems to convey, a Bavarian Village.

A city within a city, it was separate but self-sustaining, highly organized, architecturlally intricate and a civically optimistic venture on the near westside of Indianapolis—at least as

optimistic as insane asylums can be. It pro-vided patients with jobs, clubs, restaurants, working farms, stores, barber shop, bowling

alley, gardens ... all in park-like settingincluding health facilities, a spa,

church and counseling as well as dormatories.

Such asylums, originally conceived, served to both segregate ‘abnormal’ populations and

provide respite for the mentally ill and spiritu-ally weary. They were not without problems.

Albeit paternalistically, these places were designed to treat patients with dignity.

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On the Western Front

1995: I stared west out of my office at a series of silos. At the time, the Eiteljorg Museum of Native Americans and Western Art was all about, and in fact was on, the “western frontier” of Indianapolis. There was no Indiana State Museum, no central canal walk, no sculpture park leading to the Indianapolis Zoo, no Victory Field or Indiana Historical Society. There was just an old paper mill and other vestiges of defunct industry on the White River.

How about a mountain scene on those old silos? The West is a “State of Mind” I told visitors, pointing to the iconic Grand Canyon triptych in the front hall.

FAST FORWARD: White River State Park, now a polished, multimillion-dollar cultural destination, is a huge part of the city’s identity.

Travel west, just 12 blocks or so, and you’ll find a new frontier, a wasteland, known as Central State, the grounds of a much-storied former mental hospital. It is now a hodgepodge of use and misuse; the serial subject of land re-use studies; and frequented by ghost hunters.

More than 150 acres currently house a mix of depressing late 19th-century and 20th-mid-century ruins of the storied mental institution: barracks-like housing for the Hoosier Veterans Assistance Foundation (HVAF); the Indianapolis Police Department’s Mounted Patrol Headquarters, complete with horse stables and a corral; and the idyllic, well-preserved Victorian Pathology Lab and medicinal gardens stewarded as the Indiana Medical History Museum.

Plans for reuse of the old Central State Hospital have come and gone with administrations. Nothing has taken root enough to start with demolition.

a personal perspective

prologue

wasteland orwestern frontier?

what are they?

A postcard illustration depicting Central State Hospital for the Insane

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the mental and physical blight of Central State

The seen and known geography of space at the old Central State include the positive and the negative: broken windows and dilapidated buildings; frag-mented re-use, including the city’s horse patrol and veteran housing; poten-tially promising green space near downtown; old Victorian-style walkways, where patients must have roamed; underground tunnels to make any re-use project unexpectedly expensive; thriving centuries-old sycamore trees; strug-gling neighborhoods; near-proximity to the White River, IUPUI and White River State Park; proximity to the railroad and two main metropolitan artery streets; a beautifully restored, one-of-a-kind historic pathology building, with tended gardens and museum tours; brains in jars; ominous-looking equipment for autopsies; and a stunning, naturally-lit medical theatre and lecture hall …

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seen then and now2

Though construction is underway to redevelop the land, questions arise

about what remains of the history and spirit of the place: the unseen,

unknown, never spoken acknowledgements.

Broken pieces of puzzleremain. What have we missed,

by not asking where they fit in?

Mental and Physical BlightSuch asylums did not fare well over time, politi-cally, financially and through the changing winds of the social place and destiny of insane persons. The hope, the dream, was, unfortunately, to become its oppostie: hurtful, ill-equipped, unreliable, unac-countable. The Enlightenment vision—ephemeral.

Patients were more likely to be isolated from societyat large rather than protected. Eventually, theinstitution became a civic blemish, conveniently hid-den behind the perimeters of its once highly organized, planned community; the insane even more unseen.

This was part of the general trend or process of institutionalization. In the case of Central StateHospital, grand visions in the hands of the politcally changing leadership of the State, was poorly funded. It was subject to other so-cial and economic forces, including increasingly hostile cultural attitudes toward the mentally ill.

Depression Without PatientsNow, broken windows and papers still—nearly 20years after its closing in 1994—lay strewn aboutits 19th century architectural remains. Late tothe cultural trend of de-institutionaliztion, it’s closingwas quickened after questionnable deaths were reported in the news.

Actually, as far as such 19th century insane asylums go (many of which, by the way, were called “Central State”), most closed during the “deinstitutionaliza-tion” of the mentally ill, beginning in the 1960s.

Only a handful of the now-dilapidated 19thcentury gems, along with some 1970s-era,institutional-style buildings, remain of the formerVictorian Walt Disneyland for the mentally ill, spiritually tormented and culturally rejected.

Freed from increasinglly deteriorated conditions and a society that didn’t seem to care as much, some patients were able to function on their own with new medications. Others are housed in in-tegrated, low-profile social service programs, or in homeless shelters, or live on the street.

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A Well Preserved GemThe Indiana Medical History Museum is the only remaining—well preserved—original building from the vast long forgotten city of Central State Hospital for the Insane. It is a pristinely preserved gem of history, with a tidy herbal garden maintained in back for the purpose of teaching about the historical uses of medicinal herbs.

It was the old Pathology lab, where the brains of the mentally ill were dissected upon death in order to learn more about brain anatomy and function, and hopefully gain scientific insight about the patient’s sickness. Overall morphology and any aberrations were noted. The brain was weighed. Then surgical slices were preserved on slides to note possible lesions in particular parts of the brain. Autopsies were performed for medical students in the lecture hall/theatre. Actual brains in jars remain as part of the museum’s collection. Constituents and supporters of the Indiana Medical History Museum point to this building’s significance as the birthplace of modern psychiatry. But disconnected from its past, it is an outlier among the other crumbling buildings on the grounds.

A Beautiful AnomalyEven so self-described by a board member, the existence of the Old Pathology building seems something to apologize for ... It is the oddball on theold Central State grounds only because of what is absent. It is also disconcerting to the public, perhaps not unlike a lesion discovered in the brain; providing an unclear yet possibly critical insight and connection to the past ... to the living?

Like such “lesions” neuropathologists hunted for, the Indiana Medical History Museum seems to express itself as something haunting, yet highly unique ... On a stormy evening or gray Monday it can feel staged.

The Indiana Medical History Museum is located in the Old Pathology Building on the grounds of the former Central State Hospital on the near westside of Indianapolis. The museum represents the beginning of scientific psychiatry and modern medicine while the building itself is the oldest surviving pathology facility in the nation and is on the National Register of Historic Places.

The museum maintains a collection of scientific artifacts from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in a completely authentic setting. Constructed in 1895 and inaugurated in 1896, the nineteen-room Pathological Department Building, as it was then called, is equipped with three clinical laboratories, a photography lab, teaching amphitheatre, autopsy room, and library. (from the website)

“the 19th-century brainson display [are] a strange reminder of the building’spast as an insane asylum” (IU School of Medicine News, Dec. 2011)

unseen 3 anomalies and pathologies

BRAIN PATHOLOGY

Lesion

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the horrifying, enlightening specificity of place

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the mental math behind a socially constructed space

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the usefulness of ghosts

... which aspects of these various

iterations of Central State are most relevant to

today?

additional medical history collections

CENTRAL STATE HOSPITAL

PATHOLOGY LAB1895: built and used as the Pathology Deptartment of Central State Hospital1960: closed as a pathology lab but several years of partial use by Indiana University doctors helped ensure the building was not torn

down like others.

1969: established as the Indiana Medical

History Museum and began collecting non-athology related medical history items.1972: placed on the National Register of Historic Places1984: opened to the public with a space modified for changing exhibit themes.

+brain autopsies on site in Pathology Lab for the advancement of science

+diaspora of mentally ill to fend for themselves on the street

+preserved Pathology Lab

as Indiana Medical History Museum

+mixed re-use on site

mentally ill+

inspired intentions

mentally ill+

uninspiring place

uninspiring place

+problems of finance,

staffing, maltreatment, institutionalization and

social decay

Pathology Lab

The name, though critical, is a mask. It was named the

Indiana Medical History Museum as a way of preserving it, growing it and making it more

relevant to the public.

INDIANA MEDICAL HISTORY MUSEUM

brain pathology > neurology >psychiatry > psychopharmacology

> neurosciences

Indiana Medical History Museum

=_

+=

Indiana Medical History Museum

4 seen + unseen

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From a placemaking point of view, we often take for granted a simplicity that is not true. We see what we want to see and set a plan to fix what is visably broken, the seen, the managable, the

economically concrete—the physical—under the additional assumption that it is socially and politically neutral.

It is too basic a math. If we want to be as sophisticated socially as we are scientifically, we need to take the time to perform a calculus. Sociologically, we need to add synthesis to our analysis: attend to the value of the unseen, unnoticed, unacknowledged categories that

frame a particular situation.

“Uncontrollable cases were relegated

to the hospital’s so-called dungeons,

which were described in 1870 by a Central State superintendent as “dark, humid and

foul, unfit for life

of any kind, filled with maniacs who raved and howled

like tortured beasts, for want

of light, and air, and food [;…and

forced to sleep on] forbidding skeletons

of iron.”(Indiana Public Media, Yael

Ksander, 2007)

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Medical HistoryThe collection andstudy of medicalhistory locally incluldes:

• Indiana Medical History Museum at the Pathology Lab of Central State

• Indiana University Bloomington’s History and Philosophy of Science Department

Brain SciencesRecognition of the importance of the brain to

humans’ mental experience and mental health has happened locally with:

• Opening of IU’s new Neuroscience Center in downtown Indianapolis

• Famous TED presenter and author Jill Bolte Taylor, a neurologist at Indiana University

Bloomington, whose personal account of

her own stroke in My Stroke of Insight has resulted in renewed interest in left/right

hemispheric function.

Land, History, PlaceWith its 200 acres and

more than 100-year-old trees, the land of

Central State, once grand, occupies a

valuable plot of land close to downtown. If we take a more

holistic look at the land, the history and the place, we might come up with a visual

as shown below ...

Mental HealthThe fascinating chapters of how humanity has dealt with issues of mental health, especially illness, is juxtaposed locally with:

• The historically significant, scientific (pharmacological) problem solving for mental disorders begun by Eli Lilly & Co., still a leading distributor of medications used in a broad range of psychiatric and mental health-related conditions.

Pathology Lab

Former Asylum

MINDS + BRAINS

BRAINS

x

MINDS

brain pathology > neurology >psychiatry > psychopharmacology

> neurosciences

What is the scenario or story that tells all the other stories in the most relevant way while helping to solve

one or more problem?

MentalHealth

Land,History,Place

MedicalHistory

BrainSciences

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deconstructing the gem

Rather than thinking of the acreage as a well-designed park or sports ven-ue, it becomes instead a healing antidote to stigmas and stereotypes; a state of mind that points as much to the past as to our future; a refuge for Midwesterners ‘caught in the middle’ and an unexpected beacon for thosebeyond. No longer antiquated, quaint or irrelevant, the Pathology Lab,birthplace of modern psychiatry, becomes a centerpiece of theMuseum of the Mind and Brain (MOMB) experience; the brain’s centrality to human development explored; the stories of the Central State “ghosts” shared; the brain’s importance to mental health revealed; the mind’s role in human spirit and society examined. ; the brain’s importance to mental health, and the mind’s role in spirit and society examined and understood. No other institution pays tribute to human beings’ most defining feature.*

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culturally creative visioning5 conceptA Whole New MindAs Thomas Kuhn’s landmark The Structure of Scientific Revolutions pointed out, anomalies often present opportunities for paradigm shift. In the case of the grounds of Central State, this could be a chance to explain, tell a story—many stories ...

Imagine the Old Pathology building, along with its forgotten Central State surroundings, as a seat of rebirth, revitalization, re-imagination ...

Imagined at right is a modern, glass and steel, multimillion-dollar research institute, museum and school architecturally embracing its historical anchor. The Pathology Lab, returned to its original name, becomes a raison d’etre for designing a place where mind and brain—neuro-, cognitive and psychological sciences, history of science and medicine of the brain and mind, mental health—create a locally inspiring, regionally (perhaps nationally or internationally) significant center for research, learning and human self-reflection.

The drawing (above right) pays homage to the brain’s hemispheres. Two- to three-story wings are connected by an elevated, transparent walkway, resonant of the brain’s corpus callosum. From this wide, transcendent bridge, visitors look up to view the day or evening sky and look down to see the museum—a whole brain, a mind, a conscience. As eyes move down they scan the atrium, discover the curious gem at its center: the only living vestige of Central State Hospital for the Insane.

Neuroarchitecture, NeuroenvironmentWhat architect wouldn’t want to win this design opportunity? What form would it take? How might it encompass, embrace or connect to the Pathology Lab and surrounding green space? What public and private opportunities for learning, working, playingexperiementing and musing might arise?

MINDS + BRAINS meet here,at the birthplace of turn-of-the-century neuropsychiatry: the Pathology Lab becomes the nucleus, central core and historical anchor for the

Museum of the Mind and Brain

* established enough to have a presence on the world wide web

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Bachelard’s Poetics of Space reminds us that exploring the imagined—materiallyinvisible, unformed, conceptual or unacknowledged images—can yield powerfulplanning tools in re-envisioning and re-imagining urban spaces.We may be more likely to experience what Bachelard described as “a sudden salience on the surface of the psyche.” Though analytics(land use studies, market feasibility, etc.) are critical, animaginative approach often results in a specific visionthat provides a true north from which technical issuescan be measured, determined and implemented with purpose.When a ‘prepared mind’ opens itself to experience and intuitiona visionary, wild kind of problem-solving specificity unfolds.

from pathology to health

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A place to reflect on ourselves, our place in the universe and our

complex neural-cognitive-conscious relationship to our environment

NeuroeducationImagine a built-in high school, the Mind School, where students take an active role in creating the museum, exhibits and curriculum; learn about brain development, nerve impulses and advances in the brain sciences; use left- and right-brain learning strategies; develop critical- and design-thinking approaches; and benefit from an advanced literacy curriculum catering to the exploding cognitive, critical and creative, brain development of teenagers. Community service, scientific experiements and student science and knowledge design are built in opportunities.

Neuroinquiry, neuroactivity, neuroconsciencePerhaps the aptly named Thinc exhibition design firm engages students in Museum of the Mind and Brain creation, where visitors learn: how nutrition and drugs affect cognitive function; what repeated aggression does to the brain; what depression looks like; how meditation and movement focus attention; how to avoid behaviors and environments associated with mental instability. Immersive exhibits could reveal how the mind reacts to sensory deprivation, as a prisoner of war, neglected child or incarcerated criminal might experience; or how language acquisition works. The importance of thinking and asking questions. Science and art, thinking and feeling meet. There is no limit to learning from changing exhibits on the brain sciences and on human experience—from religion to politics to art—that impact and influence the mind.

NeuroeconomicsWhere do neuroscience, cognitive science, neurotechnology, imagination, information technology, creativity, business, green economy, consciousness studies and social enterprise intersect? A unique opportunity, a research institute or lab in conjunction with local or national institutes and research extenstions or initiatives could yield a unique incubation lab.

Sanitarium for the 21st Century Designed to echo the human experience of the mind itself, this learning center, research complex and park becomes a special place, transcending the sum of its parts: a non-sectarian temple where one can think about being human and our place in the universe. A space for inquiry and imagination, where we contemplate both the limits and the vastness of our capacity to know. The healing of this complex, long-vexed, latent-potential, near-downtown compund is a salve for a city, a place, a planet, a people. A solution.

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the greening of the ghosts

A decent, laudable re-use plan for the former grounds of Central Statewas set into motion in 2005 when Central Greens, LLC won a city bidto develop the site. Construction for Phase 1 development began in 2012 and continues. The plans call for “new urban neighborhoods that will allow residents to live, work and play all within walking distance,” and will include residential housing, commerical retail, recreation and public green space and education, through preserving some elements of the former hospital in a ‘cultural village.”This mixed-use plan has a little bit of everything and will prove useful.

However, had the Central State grounds been seen as a complex, place-based problem—what designers call a ‘wicked problem’—entirely different opportunitiesmight have been identified that capitalized on its uniqueness, creating an original vision, rooted in history, yet pointed toward the 21st century.

6 afterword

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burying the past along with the gem

The Road TakenThe plan, which formed in 2007 and began implementation in 2012 is described by the development partners as:

The Central Greens development will transform the former Central State Hospital into a series of new urban neighborhoods that will allow residents to live, work, and play all within walking distance. Encompassing well designed new retail, residential, recreation and education components, Central Greens will be a major catalyst for the revitalization of the city’s Near West Side.

The 150 acre site is one of the last tracts of mostly open land available for development in central Indianapolis. It is strategically located in the heart of the Near West Side neighborhoods, that are home to more than 40,000 residents. The site is 5 minutes away from Downtown and the Central Business District, the main campus of Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI), and the International Speedway. At its southern edge is Washington Street, a stretch of the Historic National Road and one of the city’s primary streets.

In other words, it will be a little bit of this and that.Plans do call for inclusion of the historic buildings in a “cultural village,” but the inclusion is not central to the concept; it is a nod to what remains of the past.

Meanwhile, the redevelopment is being implemented by premier ex-burb developer, Pedcor of Carmel, Ind. Their cookie-cutter “affordable, market rate” appartments (Phase I, see bleow) are low-end suburban in appearance. New Urbanism is part of the philosophy of this kind of build environment, and, other than

being close to the city, is similar to Carmel Clay and other ‘suburbs with Main Streets.’

While this plan offers a little bit of everything over the land and preserves history, a more holistic, vertically integraded reinterpretation of history--and how it lives on in the present—can come together in a project that incorporates all of the same things, but in an altogether unique way that both highlights the past while advancing our human mission to understand and better manage our brains, our minds, ourselves.

By taking more of a risk, digger deeper into history and asking what will be of most use, relevance and creativity for the future, a small cultural gem is preserved while a much larger one is created.

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knowledge | transformation | thought leadership

amy rubin [email protected] /317/ 340-6610

about this paperA shorter version of this paper was submitted to the Spirit & Place “inspiring Places” Pecha Kucha* contestin 2009. As it turns out, concurrent City plans had begun that same year, and called for redevelopment of theland, featuring sustainable housing in a park-like setting with token homage to history, now known as the Central Greens project. This document nevertheless remains valuable, as a specific (and possibly, in the end, non-competing) idea for redevelopment, as well as an argument for the importance of visioning—for innovation—in the planning process. This paper illustrates how, with a prepared mind, design thinking can lead to creative and inspired ideas that not only make full use ofthe past and significantly and meaningfully reinterpret the present, but give birth to a new cultural landmark.

Initial Working List of Interested Stakeholders:City of IndianapolisNear Westside CDC & Haughville neighborhood / Quality of Life initiativeIndiana Medical History MuseumCentral Indiana Community Foundation / Inspiring Places InitiativePolis Center / Spirit and Place FestivalIndiana University Neurology / Jill Bolte Taylor (author, My Stroke of Insight)IUPUI & IU Health / Stark Institute for NeuroscienceIndiana University / psychology and cognitive scienceEli Lilly & Co. & Lilly Foundation / neuropharmacology educationLilly Endowment / opportunity of national statureNational Association of Mental Illness (NAMI)Mental Health America (MHA)

*Pecha Kucha (peh-chach-ka) originated as an event for young designers in Tokyo in 2003 and has since inspired similar events in cities around the world. Pecha Kucha, Japanese for the sound of “chit chat,” provides a format (20 slides, 20 seconds each) for creatives to present ideas and projects to the public. Pecha Kucha Indianapolis, or PK Indy (pkindy.com) formed part of the 2009 “Inspiring Places” theme for the citywide Spirit & Place Festival.

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WHITEPAPER BLUESKY facilitates innovation using knowledge-based

and knowledge-building practices and products. WHITEPAPER BLUESKY

serves as a change catalyst by partnering with business leaders in visioning,

planning and analysis projects that create knowledge, transformation

and thought leadership; identifying problems and solutions that match

community need with sustainable practices; and promoting a community of

critical and creative thinkers as next-generation leaders.

vision

design

imagination

“Design thinking” is a term used to describe a kind of problem-solving, systems-thinking design. Steve Kelley of Stanford’s Innovation Center, who also help to found the design thinking firm

IDEO, coined the term. Design thinking is known to be particularly useful for “wicked problems”— a problem without clear cause and effect relationships and that cannot be “removed from its

environment, solved, and returned without effecting its environment.” *

*Keith Grint, “Wicked Problems and Clumsy Solutions,” 2008, Clinical Leader, vol. 1, no. 2