Join Me (and Chuck Bucci) on October 24th for a Special Tour of Syracuse University Restored Buildings
I'll be joined by professionals from the Syracuse University Office of Campus Planning, Design, and Construction to visit and discuss major restoration building on campus of the past five years. We'll talk about architecture, history, planning and restoration process, as well as the complex issues of need, use and cost that are essential to the success of the reinvention and reuse of any aolder building.
Here is the announcement:
Preservation Association of Central New York (PACNY) will offer a tour of three restored, rehabilitated, and reinvented buildings on the Syracuse University Campus.  Join architectural  historian Sam Gruber and campus planner Chuck Bucci on a visit to Crouse  College, Tolley Humanities Center, and Slocum Hall as they discuss the  history of these buildings and their architecture,  and especially the long hard process of restoring and renovating these  three structures in the past five years.
The tour will begin at 1:00 pm at the Crouse College south entrance (across from the Maxwell School) and will last 2 hours.
Crouse  College was built in 1889 and is one of the original university  buildings.  Designed by noted Syracuse architect Archimedes  Russell, its dramatic turreted form has long been a landmark on the  Hill, dominating the area and visible from afar. The building now houses  the main hub for SU's College of Visual and Performing Arts, the School  of Music, several art studios, music practice  rooms, a beautiful 1,000-seat auditorium, and Crouse's Holtkamp Organ.  In 2005 PACNY awarded Syracuse University a Preservation Merit Award for  its work on the restoration of the exterior masonry and the stained  glass windows of Crouse College.
Tolley  Humanities Center was also designed by Russell in 1889 as the Von Ranke  Library, in a more severe medieval style, but  still with turrets. In 1907, when Carnegie Library was built its  purpose changed.  Later it was named Tolley Hall and served as the  university administration building.  Since its 2007 renovation it has  been the Humanities Center and houses a variety of interdisciplinary  programs. 
Slocum  Hall was designed by Syracuse University School of Architecture  professors Frederick W. Revels and Earl Hallenback  and funded by philanthropist Mrs. Russell Sage as a memorial to her  father. Construction began in April 1916, but due to World War I and  labor shortages it was not finished until 1918.  It served as the home  of the agriculture school and other programs, including  the School of Architecture.  Last year, after a two-year renovation,  the building became the home of the School of Architecture, which now  occupies the entire building.  The renovation was carried out by  Garrison Architects, and is highlighted by the opening  up of the building’s great atrium, which had been built over in past  years to gain floor space.
Gruber  and Bucci will discuss the broad process and implications of bringing  old university buildings up to twenty-first century  standards while still maintaining their historic form, and they will  look at many of the details of how this was done in these three  buildings.  The tour will end with discussion of the University’s newest  renovation project, now in its planning phase.
Donation for the tour will be $10.00 for PACNY Members and $12.00 for non-members.
Sam  Gruber is past-president of PACNY, and is now Director of the Plastics  Center at the Syracuse University Library.  Chuck  Bucci is Assistant Director for New Construction at the Syracuse  University Office of Campus Planning, Design, and Construction. Adding their expertise to the tour will be Jack Osinski, Project  Manager, and Chris Danek, Academic Space Planner, both from the Syracuse  University Office of Campus Planning, Design, and Construction.
The  member-based Preservation Association of Central New York has been the  area’s citizen voice for historic preservation for over  35 years.  Founded as a reaction to the widespread neglect and  demolition of historic buildings and neighborhoods in the 1960’s, PACNY  has led the successful effort to transform our community’s perception  and care of its historic resources so that now the  City of Syracuse and Onondaga County have over a dozen historic  districts which contribute to the region’s cultural and economic  vitality.
For further information about PACNY, contact Michael Flusche (President of  PACNY) at 315-569-6761 or flusche99@yahoo.com.  See the PACNY website at http://pacny.net/. 

 
 
 
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