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Charles Trumbull Hayden Library, at 300 East Orange Mall on the Tempe campus of Arizona State University, was built in 1966 and was named for Charles Trumbull Hayden, founder of Tempe and the first president of the board of the Arizona Territorial Normal School, ASU's predecessor. Hayden Library is the largest facility on ASU's Tempe campus ...
The ASU Desert Villages are made up of apartment style houses located on the outside edges of campus. Like much of the campus, these houses were originally part of the Williams Air Force Base. The houses have 2-3 bedrooms, are fully furnished, and include a kitchen. [15] The villages are run by ASU Housing and the front desk fis located at Quad 3.
Arizona State University Tempe campus is the main campus of Arizona State University, and the largest of the five campuses [4] that comprise the university. The campus lies in the heart of Tempe, Arizona, about eight miles (13 km) east of downtown Phoenix. The campus is considered urban, and is approximately 642 acres (2.6 km 2) in size. The ...
The Stockton Campus, featuring a tower, rose gardens, architectural columns, brick-faced buildings, and numerous [21] trees, has been used in Hollywood films, due to its aesthetic likeness to East Coast Ivy League universities: High Time, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, The Sure Thing, Dead Man on Campus, All the King's Men, Flubber, and Dreamscape ...
Arizona State University at the West Valley campus is a public university in Phoenix, Arizona. It is one of five university campuses [3] that compose Arizona State University (ASU). The West Valley campus was established by the Arizona Legislature in 1984, [4] and is located in northwest Phoenix, bordering the city of Glendale.
The College of Public Programs was founded at Arizona State University's Tempe campus on April 21, 1979. [4] The college's establishment was part of the university's reorganization of several departments within other colleges. Effective July 1, 1979, the College of Public Programs housed five academic units:
The designation of Old Main as a historic place with its listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985 – the year of ASU's centennial – provoked interest in restoring and renovation the building. Efforts began in 1990, and by 1996 it had become an important part of the university’s $400 million "Campaign for Leadership".
The process that led to construction of the auditorium began in 1957 when incumbent university President Grady Gammage desired a unique facility for the ASU campus. [8] In 1956, a collapsed roof rendered the school's combination auditorium/gymnasium unusable. [9] [10] Gammage recruited his friend Frank Lloyd Wright to design the new building.