Fergus Falls State Hospital in Fergus Falls, Minnesota

The central administration building

When Minnesota’s first state hospitals in St. Peter and Rochester became woefully overcrowded, it was clear that another facility was needed to meet the needs of the state’s growing population. Fergus Falls State Hospital opened in 1890, and it’s expansive campus was quickly filled.  

The building was constructed in a style of architecture known as the Kirkbride Plan, so named after the American physician Thomas Kirkbride, who developed the style and accompanying therapy methods. The complex has a central main building and large wings extending on either side.

The Kirkbride Plan stressed the importance of routine, fresh air, natural light, and occupational therapy through chores. Like most mental health facilities of the time, however, Fergus Falls State Hospital was unable to effectively meet the variety of needs of the residents which included addiction, mental illness, and even simply poverty. Following World War II, improvements to mental health treatments and outpatient therapy greatly reduced the need for large facilities like this Kirkbride. 

In 1985 Fergus Falls State Hospital became Fergus Falls Regional Treatment Center as the mission shifted to providing local services to individuals with developmental disabilities or chemical dependency. The entire facility has been closed since 2005, and the cost of maintenance for the building threatens its longevity.

Today the area is a city park, and visitors are able to walk around the grounds of the main hospital building. The weight of the experiences of those who lived here still lingers in the area. Friends of the Kirkbride is a group dedicated to saving the historic building, and many plans to repurpose it have been considered. Currently an organization called Springboard for the Arts has an artist residency program that uses the former nurses’ dormitory to house artists. 

Similar Posts

  • MAINSTREAM: Vapidly Denouncing Vapidity

    Remember when Under the Silver Lake was the hot mess of 2018? Premiering in competition at Cannes that year, David Robert Mitchell’s follow-up to his wildly terrifying It Follows gained as many cult fans as it did detractors; the former largely viewed it as a sprawling Lynchian interrogation of the conspiracy theory, navigating hidden strata…

  • Official Trailer for ‘The Capote Tapes’ Doc About ‘Answered Prayers’

    “‘How could your friend do this to you?’” Altitude Films in the UK has released an official UK trailer for the documentary The Capote Tapes, the feature directorial debut of filmmaker Ebs Burnough. This originally premiered at last year’s Toronto Film Festival, and also played at the Hamptons and Rio de Janeiro Film Festivals. Using…

  • Laura Marano Must Pick in Interactive RomCom ‘Choose Love’ Trailer

    “I’m asking you to take a leap of faith with me.” Netflix has revealed an official trailer for “interactive” romantic comedy from Netflix titled Choose Love. This is obviously exactly what you’d expect them to make one day – a love story where a young woman has to choose between three different men, but this…

  • ‘Supa Modo’ Shows Power, Pitfalls of Child-like Imagination

    The star of “Supa Modo” is a bright young girl living in rural Kenya. Jo loves comic books and Jackie Chan movies, and has familiar half-serious, half-joking discussions with her friends about how superheroes would fare in the real world. They all agree Iron Man would not survive the wet season without rustproof armor. Read…

  • What’s New to Stream on Hulu for May 2020

    Hulu has been stuck in the third-place position when it comes to movie streaming behind Netflix and Amazon Prime because most people still see them strictly as a home for next-day television. They have movies too, though, and more than a few of them are gems that make Hulu a destination beyond last night’s TV…