Asserted to be the largest college gymnasium in the world when built.[5] Home of the S.U. basketball team before Manley Field House (1962), except for three years while the gymnasium was rebuilt after a fire..[2]
Archbold Theatre
1980
Barclay Law Library (College of Law)
1984
Belfer Audio Archives
1982
Biological Research Building
1963
Bird Library
1972
Booth Hall
1963
Named for Willis H. Booth, who earned an honorary doctorate in law in 1955 and was elected an honorary trustee of the university in 1956. It is a 8-floor coed dormitory building housing 261 students.[6][7]
Boland and Brewster Halls were built as dorms in 1968. Boland hall is named after John C. Boland (Class of 1899, Law 1901), and his wife, May L. Boland. Brewster Hall is named after Neal Brewster (Law 1902, SU Trustee) and his wife, Mabel Brewster Pierce. Brockway Hall, constructed in 2005, is named after Perle Brown Brockway (College of Medicine in 1908).[6]
Carnegie Library
1905-07
Carnegie library funded by $150,000 grant. Built of reinforced concrete, with Ionic order columns supporting a flat pediment. Its main reading room is striking with a high vaulted ceiling, Corinthian pilasters, and a second story gallery. Wainscoting and plaster columns throughout were painted to appear as stone.[2]
Carriage House
Chancellor’s Residence
1915 (obtained) 1901-02 (constructed)
Commissary
Comstock Art Facility
1982
Crouse College
1884
[2]
Crouse-Hinds Hall
1983
Ernie Davis Hall
2009
Named for Syracuse Orange football legend Ernie Davis who is first Black athlete to receive the Heisman Trophy. It is SU’s first dorm building that meets the LEED rating and was considered a high-tech dorm building when first occupied.[6]
Day Hall and Graham Dining Hall
1958
Named for Chancellors James Roscoe Day (1894-1922), and William Pratt Graham (1937-1942), respectively. Located on Mount Olympus. Radio transmitters for the WAER & WJPZ FM are located on the roof of the Day Hall dormitory.[8][9][10]
Day Care Center
DellPlain Hall
1961
Named after Morse O. DellPlain (SU trustee), who earned an electrical engineering degree from the university in 1903. While the construction was finished in 1959, male students started living there in 1961.[6]
Dineen Hall
2014
The Dineen Hall houses the Syracuse University College of Law on the West Campus expansion area of SU. Announced in November 2010, it is named for the Dineen family, who provided $15 million naming gift for the $90 million building. SU alumnus Richard Gluckman, of the Gluckman Mayner Architects in New York City, was the lead architect. The 200,000 square feet (19,000 m2), five-story building, located at 950 Irving Avenue, was constructed on the site of the Raynor parking lot in 2013.[11][12][13][14]
Drumlins Country Club
1926
Eggers Hall
1992
Flanagan Gymnasium
1989
Flint Hall
1956
Named for SU’s fifth Chancellor Charles Wesley Flint.[6]
Gebbie Clinic
1972
Goldstein Alumni and Faculty Center
1902
The Goldstein Alumni and Faculty Center(GAFC) is a 3-story red brick building which has a Colonial Georgian architecture. The building cost $25,000 to build. The GAFC was originally home to the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity, until 1974 when the Syracuse University purchased the building from the fraternity and renovated it. The building now serves as an Alumni Center where students, faculty and alumni may gather. The GAFC now serves as a restaurant as well.[15]
Goldstein Student Center
1990
Grant Auditorium (College of Law)
1966
Greenberg House (in Washington, D.C.)
1990
Haft Hall
1955
Houses the WAER-fm at 795 Ostrom Ave. Built as a dorm, later used as a sorority house. WAER moved here in 2003|[10]
Hall of Languages
1873
[2]
Haven Hall
1964
Named for SU’s second Chancellor Erastus Otis Haven.[6]
Named for donor Carrier Corporation as “Carrier Dome” for more than 40 years, renamed in 2022.
Kimmel Hall
1962
[6]
Lawrinson Hall
1965
When built Lawrinson Hall was the second-tallest building in Syracuse at 21 stories. Currently the seventh tallest building in the city of Syracuse. Named after William Henry Lawrinson and Elizabeth M. Lawrinson, and their son Ronald K. Lawrinson (none of the Lawrinsons attended SU).[6][17]
Link Hall
1970
Lubin Hall
1956
Lyman C. Smith Hall
1902
[2][18]
Lyman Hall of Natural History
1907
[2]
Lyons Hall
1971
Oren Lyons Hall was home to the Phi Sigma Sigma sorority until 1971. The university bought the building in 1974 and renamed it in 2007 after Oren Lyons, an Onondaga Nation faithkeeper and All-American lacrosse goalie for Syracuse Orange men’s lacrosse team.[6]
Original Catholic Chapel was built in 1905 on nearby private land and was made available to Syracuse students in 1939 by the Rev. Ryan Gannon.[19] Alibrandi Catholic Center building addition was built in 1982.
National Veterans Resource Center
2020
The National Veterans Resource Center at the Daniel & Gayle D’Aniello building houses the Institute for Veterans and Military Families. The building was designed by SHoP Architects in 2016, and the construction finished in spring 2020. The $64 million facility was funded entirely with philanthropic gifts. The four-story, 126,000-square-foot complex has space for a variety of veteran-related organizations and houses a 750-seat auditorium, a cafe, a gallery, a research center, and a banquet hall that turns into a lounge/study area. The facility serves Regional Student Veteran Resource Center, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs “Vet-Success on Campus”, the National Center of Excellence for Veteran Business Ownership, Veteran Business Outreach Center and Accelerator, and Syracuse University’s Office of Veteran and Military Affairs, and offices for the Army and Air Force ROTC.[20][21][22][23][24][25][26]
Newhouse Communications Center I
1964
Newhouse Communications Center II
1974
Newhouse Communications Center III
2007
The third addition to the Newhouse communications center, this building has the First Amendment to the United States Constitution etched into the windows. The building also includes a 350-seat auditorium, a dining facility and a media research center. The construction costs of the building was approximately $30 million with $17.5 million coming from the Samuel I. Newhouse foundation, which was one of the largest private donations in the school’s history.[27]
Sadler is named after John W. Sadler (class of 1896) and his sister Nettie M. Sadler (class of 1900). They donated nearly half a million to SU.[6]
Schine Student Center
1985
The Hildegarde and J. Meyer Schine Student Center was dedicated on October 18, 1985. SU announced renovations to the Schine Student Center as part of the Campus Framework plan and began the work in Spring 2019. The newly renovated student center officially reopened on February 8, 2021.[28][29][30][31][32]
Science and Technology Center/Life Sciences Complex
1994/2008
The five-story, 230,000–square feet, Life Sciences Complex hosts the biology, chemistry, and biochemistry departments. Designed by Ellenzweig Associates of Cambridge, MA, Life Sciences Complex cost $107 million and was the largest building project in the University’s history up to that point. The extension was dedicated on November 7, 2008. The Milton atrium, named for Jack and Laura Milton (class of 1951), bridges the old Center for Science and Technology to the new Life Sciences Complex.[33][34][35][36][37]
The dorm is named for Robert Shaw and his wife May M. Shaw, who donated $1.5 million towards the construction of the building. The building was designated as a Women’s residence hall and served as a Living Learning Community after 1975. Shaw has had several renovations since the late 1980s, including the addition of new wings and a dining hall. Five residential floors of the building house around 475 students.[6]
Sheraton Syracuse University Hotel and Conference Center
Built as the Von Ranke Library, the building was converted to administrative use in 1907. It was designed by Archimedes Russell, it is a Romanesque style building of red brick, with circular towers.[2]
University College
formerly a residence hall named for Grover Cleveland, who served on SU Board of Trustees 1883-1885.
Walnut Hall
1989
Former chapter house of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity. Purchased by Syracuse University in 1997
Washington Arms
1953
The Nancy Cantor Warehouse
2006
A former storage warehouse of the Syracuse-based Dunk and Bright Furniture Company in Downtown Syracuse was purchased by SU in 2005. It was renovated for classroom, gallery, and studio use at a cost of $9 million. The renovation was designed by Syracuse alumnus Richard Gluckman of New York City-based Gluckman Mayner Architects. In 2013, the Warehouse was named in honor of departing president Nancy Cantor.|[38][39][40]
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