File:Sims Hall, Syracuse University 01.jpg

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Sims Hall at Syracuse University

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Description
English: Sims Hall is located on the north side of Sims Drive, west of College Place, on the main campus of Syracuse University. The building was originally constructed in 1906 as a dormitory with a dining hall on the ground floor. From 1946 through 1951, the ground floor dining hall was expanded. In the early 1960s, the building was converted to offices and classrooms for the Department of Psychology. The entire building was renovated in 1994-1995, and the main entrance was enclosed. In 2011, a former courtyard was filled in to create a communications center for the Department of Public Safety. In its current configuration, the five-story (including basement) concrete and masonry building contains about 67,750 square feet of space. At the time of our assessment, an interior renovation of the third and fourth floors was being completed. Most of the third floor spaces were occupied, but only a few fourth floor spaces were occupied.

Contract for Construction Announced: March 28, 1906 Groundbreaking: April 2, 1906 Completed: May 1906 Occupied: September 1906 Cost: $135,000 Funding: John D. Archbold contributed $122,500

Style: Renaissance Architects: Professors Frederick Revels and Earl Hallenbeck Materials: Marble base; red brick and terra cotta

Named for: Chancellor Charles N. Sims, 1881-1893

1946-1951 Addition: Cost: $720,000 1995 Addition: Cost: $2.4 million 1995 Architect: Schleicher-Soper, Syracuse 1995 Contractor: Murnane Building Contractors

Notes: In January 1906 the Board of Trustees approved Chancellor Day's proposal to build a men's dormitory. The building was divided into five sections and with a dining hall for 250 occupying the ground floor. Although the building was completed in 1906, it was not named Sims Hall until the opening of the 1907-08 academic year.

Interestingly, Sims was constructed with funds originally donated for library support. Philanthropist Andrew Carnegie had donated money for the construction of a library on campus, with the stipulation that SU raise an endowment for library purposes. Once this $150,000 endowment had been raised, Chancellor Day, with the consent of the donors and University trustees, used the fund's capital to finance the construction of Sims Hall, the income from which was allocated to the library. John D. Archbold was reported to be the endowment's largest contributor. Yet, in a letter from Frederick H. Hurdman, public accountant, to Mr. Archbold containing a schedule of Archbold's contributions to Syracuse University from 1886 to 1914, nothing is listed for the library endowment, while a $122,500 donation is listed for the men's dormitory. All the news accounts of the day state the construction of Sims Hall was being built through the generosity of John D. Archbold.

In August 1944, Sims Hall was converted into a women's residence and remained so until the fall of 1956 when it was converted to men's housing. In late 1946 construction started on the dining hall addition to Sims, but shortages of material slowed the construction and students did not begin to use the dining hall until February 1948, and even though the addition was not complete. When completed a few years later, it seated 1,000.

During the 1960s two sections of the dormitory, Sims IV and V, were converted into offices for the Psychology Department. The basement contained the office of the University Switchboard. By 1963 Sims career as a dormitory was ending and the building began its conversion to classrooms and offices. Two sections were renovated and the remaining three sections were cleared of occupants as new men's housing was completed.

A major renovation and building update, begun in 1994 and completed in 1995, included a new glass-enclosed 4-story campus entrance. In 2011 construction began to fill in the previously open courtyard space to create a new Communications Center for the Department of Public Safety (DPS).
Date
Source Own work
Author Kiran891
Camera location43° 02′ 13.84″ N, 76° 07′ 56.54″ W Kartographer map based on OpenStreetMap.View this and other nearby images on: OpenStreetMapinfo

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current12:30, 8 July 2023Thumbnail for version as of 12:30, 8 July 20234,032 × 2,268 (7.45 MB)Kiran891 (talk | contribs)Uploaded own work with UploadWizard

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