continue to profile page : open in new page/tab Senior Hall is on the University of California, Berkeley campus, in Berkeley, California. The rustic Log cabin structure was designed by architect John Galen Howard. It was built in 1905. Senior Hall was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.Built: 1905 Design Architect : John Galen Howard location:
University of California, Berkeley campus
Berkeley, California
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab The Hearst Memorial Mining Building at the University of California, Berkeley is currently home to the university's materials science department. The Classical Revival style building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is also designated as part of California Historical Landmark #946. It was the first building on that campus designed by John Galen Howard.Built: 1907 Design Architect : John Galen Howard style: Classical Revival Neoclassical architecture location:
Oxford St.
Berkeley, California
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab Sather Tower is a campanile (bell and clock tower) on the University of California, Berkeley campus. It is more commonly known as The Campanile ( /kæmpəˈniːliː/ kamp-ə-nee-lee) due to its resemblance to the Campanile di San Marco in Venice, and serves as UC Berkeley's most recognizable symbol. It was completed in 1914 and first opened to the public in 1917. The tower stands 307 feet (93.6 m) tall, making it the third tallest bell and clock-tower in the world. It was designed by John Galen Howard, founder of the College of Environmental Design, and it marks a secondary axis in his original Beaux-Arts campus plan. Since then, it has been a major point of orientation in almost every campus master plan. The tower has seven floors, with an observation deck on the eighth floor. Some floors are used to store fossils.Built: 1917 Design Architect : John Galen Howard style: Gothic Revival architecture Late Gothic Revival location:
UC Berkeley
Berkeley, California
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab The Cutler Majestic Theatre at Emerson College, in Boston, Massachusetts, is a 1903 "Beaux Arts" style theater, designed by the architect John Galen Howard. Originally built for theatre, one of three theaters commissioned in Boston by Eben Dyer Jordan, son of the founder of Jordan Marsh, a Boston-based chain of department stores. The Majestic was converted to accommodate vaudeville shows in the 1920s and eventually into a movie house in the 1950s. The change to film came with renovations that transformed the lobby and covered up much of John Galen Howard's original Beaux-Arts architecture.Built: 1903 Design Architect : John Galen Howard location:
219 Tremont Street
Boston, Massachusetts
continue to profile page : open in new page/tab California Memorial Stadium is an outdoor football stadium on the campus of the University of California in Berkeley. Commonly known as Memorial Stadium, it is the home field for the University of California Golden Bears of the Pacific-12 Conference. The venue opened in 1923 and seated 71,799 fans until the 2010 football season, making it northern California's largest football stadium in terms of seating capacity, however, the stadium's capacity is expected to drop to around 63,000 seats after the renovation has been completed in 2012 so it will no longer hold that distinction. It will still be the largest football-only stadium in Northern California because O.co Coliseum and Candlestick Park are both multi-purpose facilities. The stadium was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on November 27, 2006.Design Architect : John Galen Howard location:
Berkeley,
buildings close to California Hall
Comment:
More Sharing Options:
Add to List
Interactive Maps
Wikipedia Information
No link has been established to a Wikipedia page yet. Please login and edit informaiton and add a link to a Wikipedia Page