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The LCC immediately extended the Asylum by building two new 3-storey pavilions and a 2-storey pavilion, while work began on the erection of a Nurses' Home at the rear of the site.  Completed in 1889, the new wards brought the bed accommodation to 2,000.  In the same year, a railway station opened at Coulsdon, providing good transport links with London. In 1890 the Asylum had a 40% recovery rate for the direct admissions of that year, the highest of any London mental hospital.
 
The LCC immediately extended the Asylum by building two new 3-storey pavilions and a 2-storey pavilion, while work began on the erection of a Nurses' Home at the rear of the site.  Completed in 1889, the new wards brought the bed accommodation to 2,000.  In the same year, a railway station opened at Coulsdon, providing good transport links with London. In 1890 the Asylum had a 40% recovery rate for the direct admissions of that year, the highest of any London mental hospital.
  
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Between 1898 and 1914 the LCC built six additional lunatic asylums, but the Cane Hill Asylum remained unmodernised.  Built in 1883, it was regarded as neither old nor new enough (electric lighting was not installed until the 1930s).  The site, being long and narrow in shape and at varying levels, made expansion difficult, and thus no major additions were ever made.  The Asylum had no modern detached admissions block, nor convalescent villas.  The Nurses' Home had been left unfinished. During WW1 the Asylum was overcrowded, resulting in widespread disease (patients in mental institutions were decimated by TB, dysentery and influenza). In 1930 the Asylum was renamed Cane Hill Mental Hospital, when the Mental Health Act of that year expunged the term 'asylum' from official use.
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Between 1898 and 1914 the LCC built six additional mental asylums, but the Cane Hill Asylum remained unmodernised.  Built in 1883, it was regarded as neither old nor new enough (electric lighting was not installed until the 1930s).  The site, being long and narrow in shape and at varying levels, made expansion difficult, and thus no major additions were ever made.  The Asylum had no modern detached admissions block, nor convalescent villas.  The Nurses' Home had been left unfinished. During WW1 the Asylum was overcrowded, resulting in widespread disease (patients in mental institutions were decimated by TB, dysentery and influenza). In 1930 the Asylum was renamed Cane Hill Mental Hospital, when the Mental Health Act of that year expunged the term 'asylum' from official use.
  
 
In 1936 the Hospital had 386 male and 1,316 female patients.  In 1937 the numbers had increased to 890 males and 1,355 females. New physical treatments were introduced during the late 1930s, such as prolonged narcosis and convulsive treatments in 1937.  The latter was superseded by electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in 1941 (the Hospital was one of the first to use ECT).  The LCC would only allow selected hospitals to use insulin coma therapy, but the medical staff at Cane Hill ignored the ruling and introduced this in 1941.  Leucotomies also began to be performed in 1941.
 
In 1936 the Hospital had 386 male and 1,316 female patients.  In 1937 the numbers had increased to 890 males and 1,355 females. New physical treatments were introduced during the late 1930s, such as prolonged narcosis and convulsive treatments in 1937.  The latter was superseded by electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) in 1941 (the Hospital was one of the first to use ECT).  The LCC would only allow selected hospitals to use insulin coma therapy, but the medical staff at Cane Hill ignored the ruling and introduced this in 1941.  Leucotomies also began to be performed in 1941.
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The Hospital farm closed during the 1960s, when government policy decreed that hospital farms should cease as patients should not be used to maintain their institutions. The introduction of talking therapies and new drugs in the 1960s led to changes in the treatment of the mentally ill.  As the decades progressed, there was less demand for the hospitalization of such patients.  From 2,240 beds in 1965, the number had dropped to 1,625 by 1974. Following a major reorganization of the NHS in 1974, the Hospital came under the control of the Bromley Area Health Authority, part of the South East Thames Regional Health Authority.
 
The Hospital farm closed during the 1960s, when government policy decreed that hospital farms should cease as patients should not be used to maintain their institutions. The introduction of talking therapies and new drugs in the 1960s led to changes in the treatment of the mentally ill.  As the decades progressed, there was less demand for the hospitalization of such patients.  From 2,240 beds in 1965, the number had dropped to 1,625 by 1974. Following a major reorganization of the NHS in 1974, the Hospital came under the control of the Bromley Area Health Authority, part of the South East Thames Regional Health Authority.
  
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The Mental Health Act, 1983, which emphasized 'Care in the Community' led to the large mental institutions being gradually run down.  Patients were found alternative accommodation in smaller groups within the community.  By 1983 the Hospital had 900 beds under the control of the Bromley District Health Authority.  By 1988 there were 787 beds. The vast majority of the Hospital closed in 1991, with two wards at the front of the hospital remaining open until March 1992 whilst a new mental health unit at Knight Hill in Norwood was completed. The medium secure unit subsequently remained open. Located in the former vicarage by the side of the Hospital, it had 23 beds and was managed by the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust.  However, this too closed, in 2008, when the patients were transferred to the newly opened medium secure unit, River House, at the Bethlem Royal Hospital.
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The Mental Health Act, 1983, which emphasized 'Care in the Community' led to the large mental institutions being gradually run down.  Patients were found alternative accommodation in smaller groups within the community.  By 1983 the Hospital had 900 beds under the control of the Bromley District Health Authority.  By 1988 there were 787 beds. The Hospital closed in March 1991, although its medium secure unit remained open. Located in the former vicarage by the side of the Hospital, it had 23 beds and was managed by the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust.  However, this too closed, in 2008, when the patients were transferred to the newly opened medium secure unit, River House, at the Bethlem Royal Hospital.
  
 
The buildings were left empty and began to deteriorate.  By the time the 83-hectare site was purchased by English Partnerships (now the Homes and Communities Agency) in 2007 many were beyond repair.  None had been listed, but it was agreed that the administration block, the chapel and the water tower would remain.  Demolition began in March 2008. Demolition had been mainly completed by the end of 2010, leaving only the administration building, the chapel and water tower, as well as a few buildings outside the fence (including the medium secure unit in the old vicarage). In November 2010 a fire broke out in the basement of the administration building.  Much of the building was destroyed, including the clock tower.  Only the front elevation survives.
 
The buildings were left empty and began to deteriorate.  By the time the 83-hectare site was purchased by English Partnerships (now the Homes and Communities Agency) in 2007 many were beyond repair.  None had been listed, but it was agreed that the administration block, the chapel and the water tower would remain.  Demolition began in March 2008. Demolition had been mainly completed by the end of 2010, leaving only the administration building, the chapel and water tower, as well as a few buildings outside the fence (including the medium secure unit in the old vicarage). In November 2010 a fire broke out in the basement of the administration building.  Much of the building was destroyed, including the clock tower.  Only the front elevation survives.

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