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Haggett Hall was the home of the Global Experience Living Learning Community, until it was closed in 2021. Due to increased demand for housing, Haggett Hall was temporarily reopened for the 2021-2022 academic year, before closing permanently in 2022. [9] Demolition began in 2024, with a new Haggett Hall slated to open in fall 2027. [10]
The ground floor of Lander Hall contained some of the central offices of the Department of Housing and Food Services. Architects for both towers were the firm of Young, Richardson, Carleton and Deltie. Unit 1, completed in 1953, was called Terry Hall and Unit 2, completed in 1957, was called Lander Hall.
There is a separate carriage house. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 5 ] Hill-Crest's approximate market value, in 2013, was $8.5 million making it then the single most expensive public university presidential residence in the United States and more valuable than the Washington Governor's Mansion .
Bebb and Gould's plan also called for all future construction to adhere to a Collegiate Gothic style. This style is best exemplified on the university campus by the early wings of Suzzallo Library, the university's central library. New construction in the 1960s saw a deviation from the Collegiate Gothic style as specified in the Regents' Plan.
The history of the Quad traces back to the beginnings of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition campus. Although the Quad was not finished until 1950, its layout was produced as early as 1915 by its designers Henry Suzzallo, an early UW President, and architect Carl Gould, who designed numerous buildings on the UW campus.
Northwest entrance to the Husky Union Building Southwest entrance to the Husky Union Building Pool room of HUB Games The HUB Ballroom. The Husky Union Building (The HUB) is a building at the University of Washington that is known as the center of campus [1] as it functions as an event center, a place for student engagement, and a place intended to improve student experience.
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The area surrounding U District station is a walkable neighborhood primarily consisting of commercial space and multi-family residential housing. Within a 1 ⁄ 2 mile (0.80 km) of the station is one of the densest concentrations of housing and jobs in the region, with nearly 15,000 jobs and over 21,000 residents counted in 2013.