Waypoint Centre For Mental Health Care
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Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care ( French: Waypoint Centre de soins de santé mentale) formerly known as ''Mental Health Centre Penetanguishene'', is a 301-bed specialty mental health hospital located on the shores of
Georgian Bay Georgian Bay (french: Baie Georgienne) is a large bay of Lake Huron, in the Laurentia bioregion. It is located entirely within the borders of Ontario, Canada. The main body of the bay lies east of the Bruce Peninsula and Manitoulin Island. To ...
in the Town of
Penetanguishene Penetanguishene , sometimes shortened to Penetang, is a town in Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada. It is located on the southeasterly tip of Georgian Bay. Incorporated on February 22, 1882, this bilingual ( French and English) community has a populat ...
, approximately north of
Toronto Toronto ( ; or ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Ontario. With a recorded population of 2,794,356 in 2021, it is the most populous city in Canada and the fourth most populous city in North America. The city is the ancho ...
. Waypoint provides both acute and longer-term psychiatric inpatient and outpatient services to
Simcoe County Simcoe County is located in the central portion of Southern Ontario, Canada. The county is just north of the Greater Toronto Area, stretching from the shores of Lake Simcoe in the east to Georgian Bay in the west. Simcoe County forms part of the ...
, part of
Dufferin County Dufferin County is a county and census division located in Central Ontario, Canada. The county seat is Orangeville, and the current Warden is Wade Mills. The current chief administrative officer is Sonya Pritchard. Dufferin covers an area of , ...
and Muskoka and the southern part of
Parry Sound Parry Sound is a sound or bay of Georgian Bay on Lake Huron, in Ontario, Canada. It is highly irregularly shaped with many deep bays and islands. Killbear Provincial Park is located on the large peninsula that separates the sound from Georgian B ...
. Waypoint is the region's only specialty mental and addiction health hospital and the province's only high secure forensic mental health program for clients served by both the mental health and justice systems.


History

The original 380-acre site was chosen by Governor John Graves Simcoe as the naval and military base to protect the Upper Great Lakes from American threats in the aftermath of War of 1812, until it was decommissioned in 1855. The Boys Reformatory of Upper Canada was established in the abandoned barracks in 1859, however the buildings were destroyed by fire in 1870. A new building was constructed, which is now known as the Administration Building. The stones from the old barracks were used as a foundation and the new stone was taken from Quarry Island in Severn Sound. The Administration Building is the oldest building on the grounds and is one of several registered historical sites. In 1904 the Boys Reformatory was phased out and the building was converted into an “asylum for the insane.” Expansion came over the years, including building Oak Ridge in 1933. During this time the name was changed to Ontario Hospital, and in 1967 Brebeuf and Bayfield buildings opened, designed as apartment-style living quarters to simulate life in the community. Around 1970, the number of patients in residence at the hospital reached a historical high of about 650. In 1969, the name was changed again to the Mental Health Centre and construction began on the Toanche Building. In 2008, the hospital was divested from the Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care to a public hospital corporation, sponsored by the Catholic Health Corporation of Ontario which is a health care sponsoring agency of the Catholic Church. In 2011, the hospital changed its name again, this time to Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care.


Oak Ridge

In 1933, the first four wards of Oak Ridge were constructed. Originally intended to provide custodial care to the “criminally insane”, Oak Ridge was the only institution of its kind in Canada at the time. Since patients rarely moved on in the early days, a second construction of four wards was added to Oak Ridge in the mid-1950s, bringing the patient capacity to 300. In March 2007, the Ontario Government included funding to replace the aging Oak Ridge Building in its budget. In 2010, early works construction for the new building began, and in spring of 2014, the Atrium building opened its doors to patients from Oak Ridge and Brebeuf.


Atrium Building

The Atrium Building opened in 2014. The building is built on the hospital’s existing site, and replaced the 160-bed Oak Ridge building and the 20-bed Brebeuf building, offering a larger space for treatment and care for people with mental illness who are involved with a justice system.


Notable patients

*
Jeffrey Arenburg Jeffrey Robert Arenburg (December 30, 1956 – June 13, 2017) was a Canadian man who shot and killed sportscaster and ex-National Hockey League player Brian Smith in Ottawa, Ontario, on August 1, 1995. Arenburg, a paranoid schizophrenic, was ...
(1956-2017), murderer of Brian Smith; released in 2006 *
Russell Maurice Johnson Russell Maurice Johnson (born 1947), also known as The Bedroom Strangler, is a Canadian serial killer and rapist who was convicted of raping and murdering at least three women in London and Guelph in the 1970s although the total number of victims ...
(born 1947), serial killer *
Mathew Charles Lamb Mathew Charles "Matt" Lamb (5 January 1948 – 7 November 1976) was a Canadian spree killer who, in 1967, avoided Canada's then-mandatory death penalty for capital murder by being found not guilty by reason of insanity. Abandoned by hi ...
(1948-1976), spree killer; was remanded in Waypoint for 30 days *
Peter Woodcock David Michael Krueger (March 5, 1939 – March 5, 2010), best known by his birth name, Peter Woodcock, was a Canadian serial killer, child rapist and diagnosed psychopath. He gained notoriety for the murders of three young children in Toronto in ...
(1939-2010), serial killer and rapist


References

www.waypointcentre.ca


External links


Official website
Hospital buildings completed in 1904 Psychiatric hospitals in Ontario Hospitals in Simcoe County {{Canada-hospital-stub