
A building that complements the third decade of abandonment and its reputation is accompanied by bad luck stories, illness, pain, death ,Satanism scenarios and metaphysical" phenomena., you instantly feel as if you are seeing something in a horror movie. Remotely built on Mount Parnitha for its dry climate and oxygenated air in 1912 it was used as a hospital for tuberculosis sufferers, the amphitheatrically-built sanatorium is where over 50 percent of its patients died within the short space of five years.
Although it was bought by the Greek Tourism Organization (GNTO) in 1965 and used first as a hotel and later a tourism school, ever since it was abandoned 20 years later it has become a favorite haunt for ghost hunters, thrill seekers and occultists alike, with numerous reports by amateurs and professionals alike of witnessing spirits, voices and eerie sounds, dramatic temperature changes from space to space, and more. Urban legend has it that a little girl wearing a white robe has been repeatedly sighted walking the corridors and crying for water.
The girl in white or else the girl Of the mistress is said that she was an inmate of the sanatorium and that because in the past could not drink even a drop of water because of the highly proggresed state of her disease , she asked to go to a nearby water source for just seeing it at least. So they helped her go to the retreat source called the Mistress, but the small girl ,reaching there, died. Since then, many see a little girl in a white nightgown, sometimes asking them water crying and sometimes running with tears ...
I have gone to this place for necromantic working and I can assure you there are a hell lot of things going on there .I was thrown a stone at my feet and then somebody giggled

Right across the creepy building is another unsettling zone –
The Park of Souls, created by artist Spyridon Dassiotis in 2012 using burnt tree trunks that survived the big fire on the mountain in 2007, in memoriam of the deceased, whose ‘souls’ have emerged from the wood in all their tragic expressions.
