Feb 19, 2006, 10:54
University of Tasmania Wrote:Until 2000, the Willow Court Precinct was part of what had become the Royal Derwent Hospital. Beginning in 1827 when invalid convicts lived in wooden huts, the site housed men, women, and children with physical and intellectual disabilities, and psychiatric disorders. ... This is today a place of disjuncture, and yet a remarkable site of continuity as well. No place else in Australia offers a similar history through architecture of changes to ideas about disability, and that in itself makes the Willow Court Precinct and the now privately owned later buildings of the Royal Derwent unique. But there are also multiple issues of meaning involving such factors as the history of botanical fashion; medical history as experimental science (the asylum was using electric shock treatment as early as 1851); the sociology of a 'caring' community and its re-imaginings of a different sort of future; the aesthetics of place; the stories told and untold which circulate around a place of fraught memory; the problems of how the site can be made to work for the community today and tomorrow. The sense of both so much to be done, and such a unique opportunity to do something special, makes visiting the site at the moment a simply astonishing experience.This place was the stuff of many schoolboy stories when I was growing up in Hobart. Most of them no doubt completely baseless, and almost all of them very cruel, uncaring and very politically incorrect.
http://colonial.arts.utas.edu.au/seminars_2002.html
But despite hearing (and fearing) so much about the place as a child, I had never actually been there to see it until very recently. Of course it is closed now, and many of the surrounding newer buildings that were also part of the hospital have fallen into disrepair and been valdalised. Fortunately the original buildings seem to have been spared from vandalism. There also seemed to be a lot of activity in some of the surrounding buildings - it looks like they are in the process of being restored which is good news.
I took many photos, but these are just three of my favourites. I'd love to go back there again. As the quote above states, it has a very unique history and I think has been often misunderstood... I'd like to find out what the real Willow Court was like.
1. View of part of the original buildings at Willow Court.
2. A door leading into a kitchen in one of the older (but not the oldest) buildings. Note that even the internal walls like this one appear to be about 2 feet thick.
3. A bed remains in one of the newer buildings.