WASHINGTON, DC.- The National Building Museum opened Architecture of an Asylum: St. Elizabeths, 1852-2017 on March 25, 2017. The exhibition traces St. Elizabeths evolution over time, reflecting shifting theories about how to care for the mentally ill, as well as the later reconfiguration of the campus as a federal workplace and a mixed-use urban development. It runs through January 15, 2018.
Established by Congress in 1855 as the Government Hospital for the Insane, St. Elizabeths is widely considered a pioneering psychiatric facility. The hospital is a prime example of the Kirkbride Plan for mental health hospitals, almost 80 of which were built throughout the nation in the second half of the 19th century. These asylums, promoted by social reformers such as Dorothea Dix as part of a movement for Moral Treatment, promised to help patients with a specialized architecture and landscape. St. Elizabeths, along with other hospitals, experienced rapid expansion in its first century, hitting a peak of almost 8,000 patients by the 1960s. De-institutionalization in the second half of the 20th century emptied out the historic buildings on campus, as well as in similar hospitals across the country. Today, a hospital operated by the District remains at the site.
Recent efforts to redevelop the St. Elizabeths site, a National Historic Landmark, have created new opportunities to access and understand its rich architectural legacy, as well as its potential to revitalize one of the Washington, D.C.s most underserved areas in Ward 8. The exhibition tells the story of how the sprawling campus of 19th and 20th century structures is transitioning to a new role as the site for the U.S. Coast Guard headquarters and a planned Department of Homeland Security headquarters on the federally operated West Campus. On the District of Columbia-controlled East Campus, officials have begun planning for new residential and community structures such as a modern sports and entertainment complex.
An important collection of architectural drawings held by the Library of Congress anchors the exhibition. Drawings include Thomas U. Walters plans for the institutions first structure, the 1855 Center Building, as well as plans for later residential cottages, farm structures, and an auditorium. A spectacular 1904 model created for the St. Louis Worlds Fair is a dramatic centerpiece for the exhibition. Also featured is Dorothea Dixs writing desk, on loan from the Smithsonians National Museum of American History, at which she penned the legislation that authorized federal funding to treat the mentally ill in the nations capital.
Supplementing drawings and models are a wide variety of objects, from an electroshock machine to a patient-made cat sculpture, introducing visitors to the people who lived and worked at the institution. One section introduces the hospitals more well-known patients, such as John Hinckley, Jr., and Ezra Pound, as well as portrayals of the mental institution in popular culture including a poster from the film One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest. The exhibition includes architectural fragments from the recent renovations at the hospital complex, such as doors, window bars, and plaster-wall paintings carefully removed from the buildings during renovation. Objects and photographs from museums and archives throughout Washington, D.C. are being displayed together for the very first time. This list includes loans from the National Library of Medicine, Library of Congress, the National Portrait Gallery, the National Museum of American History, the Smithsonian Castle Collection, and the National Museum of Health and Medicine.
The National Building Museums exhibition on Saint Elizabeths presents a remarkable story about architectural history, promising adaptive reuse, and American healthcare.