During one day of regular, routine exploring, we happened to get turned around and almost as if it was a gift sent from the urban exploring gods, in doing so we happened to stumble upon this abandoned medical clinic. Not knowing what to expect or what was inside, we cautiously made our way into the two-story monstrosity of a building. As we carefully maneuvered our way through the maze-like hallways, corridors, and various rooms, we realized that the nearly the entire first floor, which had definitely been the medical clinic, as evidenced by one room still having the operating lights hanging, had been pretty much stripped and gutted. Disappointed but undeterred, we trekked upstairs and immediately found an abandoned optometry clinic. Unfortunately, none of the exams room had any chairs left. But what was left, was walls of eyeglass shelving units, all of them empty, and a small metal eye vision tester.
Feeling deflated but optimistic, we pushed onward. Next door to the optometry area sat an abandoned dental clinic that once we stepped foot inside, we were in complete astonishment in what we discovered. This place was perhaps one of the best abandoned dental clinics that any of us had ever seen. It was far from the average clinic, with a primary dental office, laboratory, oral surgery area, and an orthodontist office, this place was on a whole nother level. Although the large majority of the dental chairs were gone, there were still enough left, including a uniquely designed set of chairs in a semicircular pattern, we assumed this would have been for educational and training purposes or even for the mass production of orthodontic work. On top of that, we also found the oral surgery area to still have rooms full of equipment and supplies, including xray machines, operating lights, defibrillators, patients dental impressions, records of heavy duty narcotic dosing, including fentanyl, and most disturbing of all was when we opened the fridge only to find full bottles of succinylcholine left behind, which is a strictly regulated paralyzing agent often used in homicide cases due to traces quickly leaving the body.