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Thread: Beautiful Campus

  1. #13

    Default Re: Beautiful Campus

    Quote Originally Posted by HelmutVII View Post
    I was thinking about starting with the oldest buildings and working up to the newest. It would illustrate how ideas, materials, building techniques and procedures changed over time.
    My summary is listed chronologically, from the first one, 'old' Martin Hall, to the current century. It would be great to have construction details included, along with the summary and original pics I've collected.

    BTW, DeClouet (1902) and Foster (1905) are the oldest extant buildings on campus. Girard (1923) is the next oldest. Of the original campus buildings built, besides the first Martin (1900) we also lost Brown Ayres (1910) to fire in ~1971.

  2. #14

    Default Re: Beautiful Campus

    Quote Originally Posted by HelmutVII View Post
    I was thinking about starting with the oldest buildings and working up to the newest. It would illustrate how ideas, materials, building techniques and procedures changed over time.
    Actually this was done in great detail when Architects Southwest created the UL Master Plan. It is a fantastic read if you haven't seen it before. It documents and categorizes every building on campus.

    What I found fascinating was that it also talks about the different design movements over the past 100 years, the reasoning behind their development, how they were incorporated into the campus, and how it affected campus (good or bad.) And then in light of that, it talks about how to design moving forward.

    https://president.louisiana.edu/stra...ns/master-plan

  3. #15

    Default Re: Beautiful Campus

    Quote Originally Posted by CajunRebel View Post
    Actually this was done in great detail when Architects Southwest created the UL Master Plan. It is a fantastic read if you haven't seen it before. It documents and categorizes every building on campus.

    What I found fascinating was that it also talks about the different design movements over the past 100 years, the reasoning behind their development, how they were incorporated into the campus, and how it affected campus (good or bad.) And then in light of that, it talks about how to design moving forward.

    https://president.louisiana.edu/stra...ns/master-plan
    Yes, it's a great document, and I've studied it pretty well over the years...it does go into a very detailed architectual/design explanation of the buildings. Here is the link to that specific doc:

    https://louisiana.edu/sites/louisian...0-%20small.pdf

    But it doesn't really discuss the construction/engineering aspects that Helmut might be able to add. I for one would really like to see that info.

  4. #16

    Default Re: Beautiful Campus

    I didn't know about the ASW document. Glad I didn't waste my time.


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