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McMahon Hall. McMahon Hall is an 11-story brutalist-style dormitory, completed in 1965, adjacent to Haggett Hall. McMahon Hall is currently under study. It may be remodeled and continue to be used as a residence hall, it may be converted to academic use or it may be demolished and replaced with another building. [15]
William H. Gates Hall houses the University of Washington School of Law. It is located off of 15th Avenue Northeast at the northwestern corner of the University of Washington campus. William H. Gates Hall, located south of the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture, [10] has 196,000 square feet (18,200 m 2) of space.
It was located southwest of the stadium next to Lander Hall (#056). Also designed by the Bremerton Naval Yard, it was torn down in 1928. [5] From the 1950s to the 2012-2014, Terry and Lander Halls were two connected towers on the west campus of the University of Washington in Seattle, sharing common facilities on the bottom two floors. Their ...
Fountain of Reflection (sometimes referred to as Phi Mu Fountain) [1] is a 1962 [2] fountain and sculpture by George Tsutakawa, installed on the campus of the University of Washington, in Seattle. [3] The work is installed outside McMahon Hall. [4]
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After McMahon quit, Shapiro told a global town hall for both TKO and Endeavor employees “in no uncertain terms” that the former wrestling boss wouldn’t return, according to another insider.
Suzzallo Library from the southwest in 2004. Red Square, officially Central Plaza or the Suzzallo Quadrangle, is a large open square on the Seattle campus of the University of Washington that serves as a hub for two of the university's major axes, connecting the campus's northern Liberal Arts Quadrangle ("The Quad") with the science and engineering buildings found on the lower campus.