, 1881. The facility, which was designed by
Charles Henry Howell, the principal asylum architect in
England and architect to the
Lunacy Commissioners and
county surveyor for Surrey from 1860–1893, was opened as the Brookwood Asylum on 17 June 1867. It was the leading
mental hospital for the western half of Surrey, occupying a large site at
Knaphill, near
Brookwood. The hospital had a
dairy farm, a
cobbler's workshop, a large
ballroom, its own fire brigade, gasworks and sewage farm and employed the services of many local businesses. The chapel, which could seat 800, opened in 1903. and it joined the
National Health Service in 1948. It eventually closed in 1994. The hospital's chapel is now a
Buddhist temple and the former mortuary now provides living accommodation for the temple's monks. A large two-storey building that was originally the hospital's social club has been converted and registered as a children's day care centre and nursery. ==Brookwood Hospital Archive==