“We’re looking for some sort of mix of single-family houses with condos or townhouses along with some senior housing,” said Thomas Tucci, the Cedar Grove township manager.
To some, the hospital grounds are literally a ghost town. During a recent tour of the property, Tom Hamilton, an assistant hospital director, said there were tales of a spirit in Building 5.
“I went up there once to check it out,” he said. “I got to this point inside the building and all the hair on my arms stood up. I thought, I’m either afraid or there’s an energy here.”
Mr. Hamilton has also entered the network of underground tunnels that employees used to travel from building to building.
A mile away, the new $58 million hospital has huge windows, a fenced-in yard, a host of programs and a lobby where a programmed piano plays classical music.
The library is named for Regina Palo, a volunteer who advocated for 25 years for a new hospital. Her son was hospitalized five times for schizophrenia at the old center; she recalled visiting him in sweltering summers when patients did without air-conditioning and basic supplies.
Ms. Palo said she did not particularly care what happens to the old center. “Too many unhappy memories,” she said.
But, she said, “We’d like to keep the history of the hospital because I think it’s important for us to know what we should do for the future.”
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