Xìnglín General Hospital (杏林綜合醫院) is perhaps the most famous ruin in downtown Tainan, Taiwan. It opened for business in 1975 as the largest and most modern hospital in this part of the city and catered to the burgeoning middle class during the boom times of the Taiwan Economic Miracle. In 1993 the hospital was ordered to shut down after being plagued by a number of scandals involving fraudulent records, medical malpractice, and allegations of wrongful death. Ongoing legal battles and fragmented ownership have left the building abandoned and neglected since then.
Exterior shot of Xinglin General Hospital on Ximen Road, Tainan.
Much like the so-called Minxiong Ghost House, this hospital is widely rumored to be haunted. In fact, it regularly appears on lists of spooky places in Taiwan1 and has been featured on national television. It eventually became the subject of two feature-length horror films: Hospital (杏林醫院), released in more than 70 theaters nation-wide on the last day of 2020, and Strange Frequencies: Taiwan Killer Hospital, a Filipino found footage film released in 2024. This fame and notoriety has made it next to impossible to separate fact from fiction, especially through the smoky lens of machine translation. As such, this entry in my catalog of abandoned places in Taiwan will be rather light on history for a change.
The front desk is one of the first things you’ll see when you enter the abandoned hospital. It is also visible from the street.
The floor plan of the hospital is a rectangle with a central courtyard open to the skies above.
One thing I appreciate about urban exploration in Taiwan is the often pristine condition of the ruins. Urban exploration culture in Taiwan is typically respectful of the state of abandonment and most people tend to abide by the axiom “take nothing but photographs, leave nothing but footprints”. Not so in this hospital, which has seen countless visitors in the decades since it was abandoned. No doubt teenagers and university students regularly dare one another to enter the “haunted house”, particularly at night, and more recently streamers and other content creators have made regular use of the space2.
Vintage style in a room on the fifth floor.
Not much to see on the rooftop of the abandoned hospital except for the surrounding cityscape.
Peering down a utility channel running through the core of the building. Careful you don’t fall down here.
Here the false ceiling has caved in, making it somewhat difficult to pick your way through the room to the other side.
The main counter on one of the higher floors. You can imagine nurses and orderlies going about their business here.
A beaten-up tube of the infamous “Darkie” brand blackface toothpaste.
A children’s storybook in the wreckage featuring space cats and dogs.
Many of the walls have been gutted by scavengers, wires torn out and strewn about in a heap.
A medicine cabinet in a private room that must have been used for long-term care.
Dating the abandonment to the summer of 1992.
Pharmacological decay.
Several of the private rooms contained personal effects.
I was interested in finding many of the artifacts visible in previously published explorations3, particularly the operating room equipment, but the building was almost completely gutted by the time I visited in 2014. Almost anything not nailed down had already been stripped away and sold for scrap. At least I found a tube of the original blackface toothpaste I’ve heard so much about since first visiting East Asia!
Another view across the central courtyard.
The decrepit hallway leading to the operating room.
The only thing remaining in the operating room is a shelf with a bunch of syringes and saline solution.
The weathered remains of one of the old hospital beds.
A garden of ferns in the courtyard of the abandoned hospital.
Eventually I worked up a little courage to descend into the basement in search of the morgue. There wasn’t much left to see in this partly flooded underworld but it was still a bit of a thrill to creep along the dark corridors, pointing my torch this way and that. Alas, there were no blood-curdling screams, no spooky apparitions. What gives? Maybe I need to return by night.
A spiral staircase descending into the basement from behind the front desk; presumably this was for shuttling medical records back and forth.
Stalking through the basement of a haunted hospital in Tainan. Nightmare fuel, for those inclined to such things.
The basement was partly flooded but otherwise empty. I imagine this room might have once been the morgue.
Most likely the X-ray room, but that’s just a guess.
One final look at the small fern garden in the courtyard of Xinglin General Hospital. One plaque reads “divine medicial skill” (醫術如神), another references “benevolence and assistance” (仁心濟世).
Despite the rather anti-climatic exploration it was still interesting to scope out this famous old hospital in downtown Tainan. It is remarkable to ponder the second life this building has enjoyed, particularly in the 2020s, as it became the backdrop for horror films and no shortage of content creators seeking to juice engagement. Don’t expect much should you visit these days; even in 2014 the site was little more than a hollow shell, but at least the scale of the building remains impressive, and it makes for some decent photos here and there.
A sidelong perspective on this infamous abandoned hospital in downtown Tainan.
Footnotes
Here is one example of the genre but you could easily find dozens more by searching the Chinese name of the hospital. ↩
Two posts on Pixnet here and here will give you a taste of this kind of content. ↩
Most of these explorations are now offline, but this news report shows some of the operating room artifacts I was hoping to see. ↩
Warning: this location is abandoned, hazardous, or otherwise neglected and may be unsafe and even dangerous! Exercise appropriate precautions when visiting.
I am a web application developer, photojournalist, urban explorer, and history enthusiast passionate about the open web and documenting my experiences on this planet. This project was founded in the early 2010s and has evolved into a sort of personal Wikipedia of places that interest me (and often the photographs I’ve taken there). I’m originally from Toronto, Canada, but spend most of my time residing in Taiwan.