Cornell West Campus

Coordinates: 42°26′50″N 76°29′22″W / 42.44722°N 76.48944°W / 42.44722; -76.48944
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cornell West Campus as seen from McGraw Tower in May 2013
The War Memorial seen from a distance

West Campus is a residential section of Cornell University main campus in Ithaca, New York. It is bounded roughly by Fall Creek gorge to the north, West Avenue and Libe Slope to the east, Cascadilla gorge and the Ithaca City Cemetery to the south, and University Avenue and Lake Street to the west.[1] It now primarily houses transfer students, second year students, and upperclassmen.

The university's Division of Student and Campus Life (SCL) uses the term differently, to refer to those buildings which are part of the West Campus House System, which organizes residents into five residential colleges. SCL labels its traditional dormitories and other residences on West Campus and in Collegetown collectively as "South Campus."[2]

History[edit]

Cascadilla Hall

Cornell's first president, Andrew Dickson White, was broadly opposed to student dormitories, believing that boarding houses and fraternities provided a superior living environment.[3] Owing to the isolation of the campus, the university acquired Cascadilla Hall and housed some students and faculty there, and later in the "Stone Row" buildings on central campus, White, McGraw, and Morrill Halls. No dedicated residence halls would be erected for almost half a century.

Grand Terrace[edit]

The 1920s plans to expand the gothics
A postcard of Baker Tower
Detail of ornamentation on Founders Hall

After Prudence Risley Hall was designed as a women's residence in 1911, efforts began on a men's residential complex on West Campus. In 1910, Warren Hanning's campus plan had established the site for new buildings in the English Collegiate Gothic style. Trustees A.D. White, George Charles Boldt, and Robert H. Treman led a subscription campaign. The site was designed by architect Ralph Adams Cram, who had recently completed the Graduate School at Princeton University. Architectural firm Day & Klauder designed multiple buildings, each housing between 16 and 30 men. The first, Founders Hall, was completed in 1913.[4]

In the 1920s, West Campus was envisioned as fully Gothic in style, connected to Frederick Law Olmsted's plan of a grand terrace overlooking Cayuga Lake. Rhode Island architect F. Ellis Jackson, of the class of 1900, expanded this plan to include a memorial to the 264 Cornellians who had died in World War I. The war memorial group, completed in 1928, features the towers of Lyon Hall to the north and McFaddin Hall to the south, and a memorial cloister connecting the two.[5] The ninth and last of the "Gothic" structures, Mennen Hall, was built in 1931.

The grand terrace was never realized amidst the Great Depression and World War II, and the plans scrapped owing to the rapid postwar expansion in enrollment. Six modern brick-faced dormitories were built in 1953 to accommodate the postwar expansion. Numbered 1 to 6, these were designated the "University Halls" to distinguish them from the Gothic "Baker Dormitories." In the 1960s–1980s, five of the individual University Halls were named in honor of various alumni classes that had achieved large donation records. The original Noyes Community Center, which offered dining, recreation and other services to residents of the campus, was constructed in 1966.

The university also built or acquired a number of small residences in the area; it purchased the Central Avenue fraternity houses of Psi Upsilon and Sigma Phi fraternities to build Myron Taylor Hall (dedicated 1932), to be the home of the Cornell Law School, and built new houses for them on West Campus.[6] These acquisitions accelerated after the war, with the university removing faculty housing and acquiring fraternities and other small living units around campus. Some, like 110 Edgemoor Lane, were demolished for parking or new construction,[7] while others have been maintained as offices or residences.

Before funding was obtained for new residences on either North or West Campus, the university added housing in the Collegetown neighborhood south of campus. Sheldon Court and Sage Infirmary (now Schuyler House) were converted into dormitories in 1981.[8] Cascadilla Hall, the oldest building on campus, was renovated 1983–84, including the addition of a fifth floor, which increased its capacity from 144 beds to approximately 390.[9]

1999 West Campus Initiative[edit]

Cornell had been considering establishing a series of residential colleges since a campus committee chaired by Alain Seznec recommended them in 1969.[10] Although a residential college was established in Risley Hall in 1970, a lack of funding delayed more widespread implementation. In 1999, then-Cornell president Hunter R. Rawlings III announced a new West Campus Initiative to rebuild large parts of West Campus. With an initial $100 million donation, the project aimed to create a residential college system on West Campus. Furthermore, a new Noyes Recreational Community Center was also proposed to replace the original community center. Construction was completed in August 2008.

Residences[edit]

House system[edit]

One of the dormitory wings of Hans Bethe House (left) connected to a communal area (right). The house dining hall is located on the first floor of the structure on the right with lounges, meeting rooms, and study space filling the second floor of the structure.

The West Campus House System, created as part of the Residential Initiative, organizes residents into five houses, each named after a noted Cornell professor:

  • Alice Cook House (opened 2004), named in honor of School of Industrial and Labor Relations labor historian and University Ombudsman Alice H. Cook (1903—1998)
  • Carl Becker House (opened 2005), named in honor of historian Carl L. Becker (1873—1945)
  • Hans Bethe House (completed January 2007), named in honor of Nobel Prize-winning Cornell physicist Hans Bethe (1906–2005)
  • William T. Keeton House (completed August 2008), named in honor of esteemed Cornell biology professor William T. Keeton (1933–1980)
  • Flora Rose House (completed August 2008, opened August 2009) named after Flora Rose (1874–1959), co-founder of the College of Human Ecology.

The residential college system was intended to create smaller learning communities, to which end each is headed by a House Professor-Dean, a tenured professor who directs the educational program, assisted by an Assistant Dean who is a student affairs professional. In addition to programming, the houses also sponsor various recreational and social activities. All residents in the system are required to enroll in a house meal plan, which enables them to participate in a weekly dinner exclusive to each house.

Each house has a main building, which includes a dining hall, laundry, kitchen, and study facilities. Most residents are in single and double rooms along corridors, with shared bathrooms, with some in suites, accommodating up to five people.[11] In addition, each house includes students who are housed in the neighboring "Gothic" halls.

Baker Dormitories[edit]

The War Memorial and Hans Bethe House (in background)
The Gothics
Boldt Hall

To the north and east of the houses lie the nine original West Campus residences, collectively known as the "Baker dormitories," after George Fisher Baker, the New York City banker who funded their construction, or as the "Gothic halls," reflecting their ivy-covered Collegiate Gothic architecture and construction of local bluestone trimmed in Indiana limestone. The firm of Day & Klauder (Charles Zeller Klauder after Day's death in 1918) designed all these buildings, which were built between 1913 and 1931.

They housed both freshmen and upper-level males through the 1970s, after which most became co-ed, and Lyon Hall was women-only. All were integrated into the house system after its creation.

  • Baker Tower (completed 1913, part of Alice Cook House) - gift of the daughter of George Fisher Baker
  • Boldt Hall (1921, Alice Cook House) - named for trustee George Boldt; houses the Language House, the only program house in the West Campus House System
  • Boldt Tower (1928, Alice Cook House) - named for trustee George Boldt, founding manager and president of the old Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City; an inscribed red sandstone block from hotels is embedded in the south facade[12]
  • Founders Hall (1914, Flora Rose House)
  • North Baker Hall (1915, Alice Cook House)
  • South Baker Hall (1915, Flora Rose House)
  • Lyon Hall (1928, Flora Rose) - connected to the Army Tower of the War Memorial, and housing a memorial shrine overseen by the Scabbard and Blade society
  • McFaddin Hall (1928, Hans Bethe House) - named by donor Harrison D. McFaddin, Class of 1894, creator of the banker's lamp, in honor of his parents;[13] connected to the Navy Tower of the War Memorial
  • Mennen Hall (1931, Flora Rose House) - named for donor William Gerhard Mennen, Class of 1908 and built by the Crowell Little Construction Company of Cleveland, Ohio[14]

Class Halls[edit]

Class of '18 Hall

Known as the University Halls or "U-Halls," the Class Halls were originally all-male dormitories built on West Campus in 1953. They were designed by Chapman, Evans & Delehanty and Quinlivan, Pierik & Krause and constructed of utilitarian cinder block faced with brick.[15] Although officially denied by Cornell, some claim that when constructed, they were intended to be temporary housing (as evidenced, for example, by the transitory fiberglass showers) until better structures could be built. A student union, Noyes Center, was built in the middle of the group in 1966.

The buildings were later renamed:

  • University Hall 1 / Class of 1917 Hall, later home to the Transfer Center and the Multicultural Living-Learning Unit (McLLU) program houses
  • University Hall 2 / Class of 1928 Hall
  • University Hall 3 / Class of 1922 Hall
  • University Hall 4 / Class of 1918 Hall, named in 1973 in recognition of the class's record-setting gift;[16] later home to the Latino Living Center program house
  • University Hall 5 / Class of 1926 Hall, later home to the Just About Music (JAM) program house
  • University Hall 6 / Sperry Hall, named for Elmer Sperry (inventor of the gyroscope)[17]

In 1987, these buildings were gutted and the original aluminum-framed windows replaced with dark-brown metal casings. More study spaces and kitchens were added, and the capacity of each building was reduced.[18] As part of the West Campus Residential Initiative, all building were slated for demolition as allowed by capacity from new construction on North Campus; all were demolished between 2003 and 2007 to make way for the new house buildings.

Housing selection process[edit]

Cornell uses a lottery system to allocate on-campus housing, starting with rising sophomores, who are required to live in university-affiliated housing, then extended to rising juniors and seniors.

Revisions to the Flora Rose Housing system were implemented starting in the 2013–2014 academic year to keep the most active, interested residents of Rose House in the system. The lottery system was abolished in Rose House and replaced with two programs: the Rose Scholars program and the Rose Community Organizers program. The larger Rose Scholars program requires residents to attend events hosted within and approved by the House on a weekly basis. The Rose Community Organizers, the smaller program, requires residents to attend the weekly Rose Roundtable meetings and organize events for the House and West Campus. Completion of either event guarantees residents housing within Rose House for the following year. Residents must apply and be accepted into the program in the early fall to participate. Emphasis in the application process is on essays.

Small living units[edit]

Telluride House, which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, houses a selective residential society on West Campus.

West Campus includes a number of other student residential structures, including those organized under the Cornell University Residence Plan of 1966, among the following:

University-owned[edit]

A 1900 postcard of Cornell's Chi Psi fraternity house
Llenroc, the Delta Phi fraternity house and former residence of Ezra Cornell

Private[edit]

  • 104 West (formerly Kosher Dining Hall; owned by Center for Jewish Living, operated by Cornell Dining), 104 West Ave
  • Algonquin Lodge (cooperative), 526 Stewart Ave
  • Alpha Delta Phi (fraternity), 777 Stewart Ave
  • Alpha Sigma Phi ("Rockledge," fraternity), 804 Stewart Ave[23]
  • Cayuga Lodge (cooperative), 630 Stewart Ave
  • Center for Jewish Living (formerly Young Israel at Cornell, previously Theta Delta Chi fraternity), 106 West Ave
  • Chi Psi (fraternity), 810 University Ave
  • Delta Phi ("Llenroc," Ezra Cornell's mansion, fraternity), 100 Cornell Ave
  • Lambda Chi Alpha ("Edgemoor," fraternity), 125 Edgemoor Ln[24]
  • Omega Tau Sigma (fraternity), 200 Willard Wy
  • Phi Sigma Kappa (fraternity), 702 University Ave
  • Pi Kappa Alpha (fraternity), 17 South Ave
  • Sigma Nu (fraternity), 230 Willard Wy
  • Sigma Pi (fraternity), 730 University Ave
  • Stewart Little (Cooperative), 211 Stewart Ave
  • Telluride House (scholarship residence), 217 West Ave
  • Theta Delta Chi (fraternity), 800 University Ave

Former[edit]

War Memorial[edit]

The War Memorial

The War Memorial, dedicated on May 23, 1931, included a radio address by President Herbert Hoover. It was the 14th anniversary of the first Americans, which included an American Ambulance Field Service unit led by Capt. Edward Tinkham (Class of 1916) and other Cornellians, arriving on the Western Front in World War I.[25]

The complex includes two towers representing the army and the navy, Lyon Hall to the north and McFaddin Hall to the south. Between the two is a cloister featuring the names of 264 Cornellians who died in the war; Hans Wagner, Class of 1912, who died fighting for the German Empire, was excluded.[25] Some students objected to the omission, and raised a fund to add his name; the university stationed a guard at the memorial to prevent his surreptitious addition. The president of the university, Livingston Farrand, denied the appeal,[26] and in 1934 the funds were instead given to Kurt Lewin, acting professor of education and a refugee from the Third Reich.[6]

The names are inscribed on 16 plaques set between unglazed tracery windows, over which are inscribed the names of the battles in which they fought. The names of individual and group donors toward the construction of the halls are inscribed in the tower rooms, Lyon Hall, and over the buildings' entries. The first floor of the War Memorial includes an elaborately decorated octagonal memorial room to the war dead, including a painting by Alison Mason Kingsbury. The upper two floors were designed as the meeting rooms and apartments for the Quill and Dagger senior society.[27]

Other buildings[edit]

Noyes Community Recreation Center
Ithaca City Cemetery

West Campus was served by the Noyes Community Center, formerly the Noyes Student Union, located on Stewart Avenue, centered on the axis of the War Memorial, until the 2006-07 academic year.[28] This building was demolished and in 2007 was replaced with the Noyes Community Recreation Center, which provides indoor athletic facilities located on Campus Road.

Academic buildings include: the Treman House (1902) designed by William Henry Miller, which houses the George McT. Kahin Center for Advanced Research on Southeast Asia.[29]

Parking[edit]

Insufficient parking on West Campus has been the source of controversy and litigation. Alice Cook House was built on the main West Campus parking lot. The University sought to replace the lost parking spaces by paving over the Redbud Woods, located on the gardens of the Treman estate. Conservation advocates sought to protect the area as a Historic District, and advocated the construction of underground parking beneath the new West Campus houses. Nonetheless, after much litigation and protests, the University paved the woods as a dormitory parking lot.[30]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Office of the University Architect, Cornell Master Plan for the Ithaca Campus, Cornell University, retrieved 2023-12-18
  2. ^ Housing & Residential Life, Residence Halls, Cornell University Student and Campus Life, retrieved 2023-12-18
  3. ^ Gumprecht, Blake (January 2006), "Fraternity Row, The Student Ghetto, and the Faculty Enclave: Characteristic Residential Districts in the American College Town", Journal of Urban History, vol. 32, no. 2, pp. 231–73
  4. ^ Founders Hall, retrieved 2023-12-18
  5. ^ "War Memorial at Lyon and McFaddin Halls", Cornell University Veterans Memorials, Cornell University, retrieved 2023-12-18
  6. ^ a b Bishop, Morris (1962), A History of Cornell, Cornell University Press, ISBN 978-0-8014-5537-7
  7. ^ Mallory, Donald L., 80 Years at Cornell, 1890-1970. A History of Delta Tau Delta Fraternity at Cornell University, Delta Tau Delta, Beta Omicron Chapter
  8. ^ Kriss, Erik (October 2, 1980). "Trustees Will Not Plan To Construct New Dorms For at Least Two Years". Cornell Daily Sun. p. 1. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
  9. ^ "Cascadilla Hall Renovation Given Approval" (PDF), Cornell Chronicle, vol. 12, no. 17, p. 1, February 5, 1981
  10. ^ "Report on the Committee on Residential Colleges" (PDF). Cornell Chronicle. Vol. 1, no. 1. September 25, 1969. p. 5. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
  11. ^ Housing & Residential Life, West Campus House System, Cornell University, retrieved 2023-12-18
  12. ^ Division of Facilities and Campus Services, Boldt Tower, Cornell University, retrieved 2023-12-18
  13. ^ "Cornell Gets $144,000 for Men's Dormitory; Gift From Harrison D. McFaddin Will Complete War Memorial Tower Group", The New York Times, February 26, 1928, retrieved 2023-12-18
  14. ^ "Cornell Contracts for New Dormitory; Building to House 36 Men Is the Gift of W.G. Mennen and Mrs. E.M. Williams", The New York Times, December 20, 1931, retrieved 2023-12-18
  15. ^ 3089-**SPERRY COMMUNITY - U HALL #6 - Facility Information Archived 2006-09-08 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ "Dormitory Is Renamed For Class of 1918", The Ithaca Journal, p. 3, June 6, 1973, retrieved 2023-12-18
  17. ^ Dear Uncle Ezra - Questions for Thursday, June 15, 1995 - Cornell University Archived October 12, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ "3089-**SPERRY COMMUNITY - U HALL #6 - Facility Information". Archived from the original on 2006-09-08. Retrieved 2007-01-08. visited 2007-01-07
  19. ^ "Chapter History". ChiPhiCornell.org. Chi Phi, Xi Chapter at Cornell University. Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  20. ^ "The Deke House". Delta Chi Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon. Retrieved 2023-12-18.
  21. ^ "4732-McGraw Place 118,The Oaks - Facility Information". Archived from the original on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2015-06-04.
  22. ^ "Live on Campus". Campuslife.cornell.edu. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  23. ^ "cornell.alphasigmaphi.org". Cornell.alphasigmaphi.org. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  24. ^ "Edgemoor". Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity at Cornell University. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  25. ^ a b Wilensky, Joe (May 23, 2023), "Campus Memorials Pay Tribute to Cornellians Lost in Wartime", Cornellians, retrieved 2023-12-18
  26. ^ "German Name Barred on Cornell Memorial; President Farrand Declines to Act on Pleas to Include Hans Wagner", The New York Times, p. 12, May 8, 1931, retrieved 2023-12-18
  27. ^ 3013-WAR MEMORIAL - Facility Information Archived 2006-09-08 at the Wayback Machine
  28. ^ 3029-**NOYES COMMUNITY CENTER - Facility Information Archived 2007-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ "4736-STEWART AVE 640,KAHIN CENTER - Facility Information". Archived from the original on 2006-09-08. Retrieved 2007-01-09. retrieve 2007-01-09
  30. ^ "Story of Redbud Woods". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-01-09. retrieved 2007-01-08

External links[edit]

42°26′50″N 76°29′22″W / 42.44722°N 76.48944°W / 42.44722; -76.48944