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Campus of Virginia Tech

The main campus of Virginia Tech is located in Blacksburg, Virginia; the central campus is roughly bordered by Prices Fork Road to the northwest, Plantation Road to the west, Main Street to the east, and U.S. Route 460 bypass to the south, although it also has several thousand acres beyond the central campus. The Virginia Tech campus consists of 130 buildings on approximately 2,600 acres (11 km2).[2][3] It was the site of the Draper's Meadow massacre in 1755 during the French and Indian War.

Virginia Tech Campus
MottoUt Prosim (Latin)
Location37°13′30″N 80°25′30″W / 37.225°N 80.425°W / 37.225; -80.425
ColorsChicago maroon and Burnt orange[1]    
MascotHokieBird
Websitewww.vt.edu

National Capital Region and Branch Campus Centers Edit

Virginia Tech's presence in the National Capital Region is continually expanding. Current locations include Alexandria, Arlington, Fairfax, Falls Church, Leesburg, Manassas, and Middleburg. The university also has several commonwealth branch campus centers: Hampton Roads (Virginia Beach), Richmond, Roanoke, and the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center in Abingdon.[4][5] The university also owns the Center for European Studies and Architecture in Ticino, Switzerland.[6]

Main Campus Academic buildings Edit

 
Burruss Hall, the main administration building and iconic symbol of the Virginia Tech Blacksburg campus.
 
Cowgill Hall with Burchard Hall in the foreground
 
Norris Hall

Agnew Hall Edit

Originally known as the Home Economics Building, Agnew Hall was constructed in 1940 at a cost of $42,525. In 1949 it was named in honor of Ella Graham Agnew, the first woman to receive a field appointment from the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The building is used primarily by the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. In 2009, a $1.6  million renovation took place which added lab space to the first floor for the Department of Biological Systems Engineering.[7]

Bishop-Favrao Hall Edit

Bishop-Favrao Hall is home to the Department of Building Construction, which is under the College of Architecture and Urban Studies (CAUS), and the Myers-Lawson School of Construction. Much of the building has its systems exposed so that students can see them and learn about the systems. Bishop-Favrao was completed in December 2007 and is named after Richard Bishop and William Favrao, the Department of Building Construction's founder and department head until 1977.[8]

Burchard Hall Edit

Constructed in 1998 and named after Charles Burchard, the founding dean of the College of Architecture and Urban Studies between 1964 and 1979, Burchard Hall provides studio space for students in the architecture and industrial design programs. The building also provides office and classroom spaces as well as specialized studio space. Burchard Hall is actually constructed underground and has four pyramidal skylights that illuminate the studio spaces below. One can access Burchard Hall via either of the three access portals on the "roof", or through the ground-floor entrances. Burchard Hall also has a walkway connecting it to the nearby Cowgill Hall.[9]

Burruss Hall Edit

Constructed in 1936 facing the center of the drill field and originally known as the Teaching and Administration Building, Burruss Hall is the main administration building on campus and the iconic symbol of Virginia Tech. A west wing and rear addition were built in 1968, and an east wing was added in 1970. It contains a 3,003-seat auditorium, a venue where major events such as commencement, presidential speeches, concerts, and performing arts shows are held. Additionally, the first floor of the building houses faculty offices, studios and classrooms for the College of Architecture and Urban Studies. The building is named for the eighth president of Virginia Tech, Julian Ashby Burruss.[10]

Cowgill Hall Edit

Cowgill Hall, located on Perry Street, is the home of Virginia Tech's College of Architecture and Urban Studies. It was completed in 1969 and is named for Clinton Harriman Cowgill, who retired in 1956 after 28 years as the architecture department head.[11]

In 2006 Cowgill Hall was named the winner of the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects Test of Time Award. This award is presented annually to a building that has served the same function for at least 25 years.[12][13]

Davidson Hall Edit

Davidson Hall contains office space, teaching labs, and classrooms. Originally constructed in 1928, additions to the structure were completed in 1933 and 1938; the structure was also renovated between 1964 and 1965. Named in honor of Robert James Davidson, the Dean of the Department of Applied Sciences, it was the department home for the Department of Chemistry. Davidson was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a member of the Washington Academy of Science, a member of the American Chemical Society, and served as the President of the National Association of Official Agricultural Chemists, in 1903. Davidson was also a delegate to the International Congress of Applied Chemistry at London, in 1909.[14]

In 2012 a $31 million renovation of Davidson Hall broke ground. When completed, Davidson Hall will have modern research laboratories, office space, new classrooms, and a 300-person auditorium. As of May 2014, substantial completion was expected in May 2014.[15]

Derring Hall Edit

Derring Hall, a five-story building, was constructed in 1969 and contains offices, classroom space, and laboratories for primarily the biological sciences and geosciences programs at Virginia Tech. The building was named after Paul Neyron Derring, a popular administrator with the students, who was stricken blind at the age of thirteen. Derring served on the State Commission for the Visually Handicapped and served on the Blacksburg Town Council.[16]

Durham Hall Edit

Durham Hall, a $16 million project,[17] opened in 1998 and was called "New Engineering Building", or "The NEB", until 2001. It was named in honor of Fred D. Durham, co-founder of the Dover Corporation, a Fortune 500 manufacturing company located in New York City.[18]

Norris Hall Edit

Norris Hall is a four-story (1 floor below grade) Hokie Stone academic building located between Burruss and Holden Halls.[19] The two wings of the building, built in 1960 and 1962, encompass approximately 70,000 gross square feet[20] and house the main office for the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, room 219,[21] and used to house the Dean's Office for the College of Engineering, room 333,[22] The building has been home to the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics, room 223,[23] for almost fifty years, and is named for Earl Bertram Norris, who served as dean of engineering for twenty-four years between 1928 and 1952.[24]

Norris Hall was also the location of the second shooting attack during the Virginia Tech shootings on April 16, 2007. The building was the site of 31 of the 33 fatalities (including the gunman), and all 17 wounded faculty and students. The building was closed for the rest of the 2007 spring semester, and reopened with access limited to faculty and students with legitimate business inside at remaining offices and laboratories on June 18, 2007.[25] On December 20, 2007, it was announced that the second floor of Norris would be renovated and become home to the Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention.[26]

On April 10, 2009, a ceremony was held to commemorate the reopening of the west wing of Norris Hall. The area consists of six reconfigured rooms and laboratories and is home to the new Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention as well as the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics. The renovation project was completed in March 2009 at a cost of approximately one million dollars; many goods and services were donated by individuals and contractors in support of the project.[27] As department head of Engineering Science and Mechanics, Dr. Ishwar Puri played a leading role in the reoccupation of Norris Hall where his department is housed.[28] Among other roles, he spoke at the April 10 ceremony.[29]

Military Building Edit

Originally constructed in 1936 and renovated in 1998, the Military Building is located on the Upper Quad. It is the base of operations for the Virginia Tech Rescue Squad and home to the Army, Navy, and Air Force ROTC programs. It also houses the College of Engineering's Joseph F. Ware, Jr. Advanced Engineering Lab.[30]

Joseph F. Ware, Jr. Advanced Engineering Lab Edit

 
Joseph F. Ware, Jr.
 
Lane Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.[31]
 
The Drillfield looking towards Newman Library

Work began on the Joseph F. Ware, Jr. Advanced Engineering Lab (Ware Lab) in 1997, in a collaboration of Joseph F. Ware, Jr., his wife Jennifer "Jenna" Ware, MSW, LCSW, ATP/CFI, and Hayden Griffin, Ph.D. of Virginia Tech., and the Ware Lab was opened September 4, 1998. The Lab is named after its founder and 1937 Mechanical Engineering Alumnus Joseph F. Ware, Jr.[32] As a part of the College of Engineering, the Ware Lab is home to many student-based research and design projects. Focused on a hands-on-learning environment, students are encouraged to participate in these projects as early as their freshman year. The Klages Machine Shop is also located within the Ware Lab and is equipped with various machine tools used for project manufacturing, including two Numerical Control (CNC) Machines.[33] The lab is home to such notable teams as the Hybrid Electric Vehicle Team, Formula SAE (VT Motorsports), BOLT all electric motorcycle team and the Baja SAE team. Other teams in the lab include AISC Steel Bridge (SBT), Design Build Fly (DBF), and the Autonomous Aerial Vehicle Team (AAVT).

 
Torgersen Bridge on Alumni Mall
 
Moss Arts Center
 
Litton-Reaves Hall contains classrooms and labs for the Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences
 
Hutcheson Hall houses offices and classrooms

Other academic buildings Edit

Other academic buildings on the Blacksburg campus:[34]

  • Art and Design Learning Center[35]
  • Cheatham Hall[36]
  • Dairy Science Complex[37]
  • Engel Hall (formerly the Biochemistry Building)
  • Femoyer Hall
  • Food Science and Technology
  • Fralin Biotechnology Center
  • Goodwin Hall (formerly 'Signature Engineering Building')[38]
  • Hahn Hall (formerly Chemistry/Physics)
  • Hancock Hall
  • Holden Hall
  • Hutcheson Hall
  • Lane Hall (formerly Barracks No. 1)
  • Liberal Arts Building (formerly the YMCA building)
  • Litton Reaves Hall (formerly the Animal Sciences Building)
  • Major Williams Hall
  • McBryde Hall
  • Newman Library
  • Pamplin Hall (formerly Commerce Hall)
  • Patton Hall
  • Price Hall (formerly Agricultural Hall)
  • Randolph Hall
  • Robeson Hall
  • Sandy Hall (formerly the Extension Division Building)
  • Saunders Hall (formerly the Dairy Science Building)
  • Seitz Hall (formerly the Agricultural Engineering Building)
  • Shanks Hall
  • Smyth Hall (formerly the Natural Science Building)
  • Theatre 101
  • Torgersen Hall
  • Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine
  • Wallace Hall
  • Whittemore Hall
  • Williams Hall (formerly the Academic Science Building)

Blacksburg Academic facilities Edit

Athletics buildings Edit

 
Aerial view of Lane Stadium (2011)
 
Cassell Coliseum indoor sports arena
 
English Field baseball stadium
 
Virginia Tech students and fans rush the field after Virginia Tech defeated the Miami Hurricanes 31–7 on November 1, 2003.[39]

Lane Stadium Edit

Lane Stadium is the stadium for Virginia Tech's football team. It opened in 1965 has been rated as having the "number one home field advantage" in all of college football.[40] It replaced Miles Stadium, a smaller facility that once stood directly behind the War Memorial Gym.

Cassell Coliseum Edit

Cassell Coliseum is a 10,052-seat multi-purpose arena in Blacksburg, Virginia. The arena opened in 1961. It is home to the Virginia Tech Hokies men's and women's basketball teams.

Other athletics facilities Edit

Additional athletic facilities:[41]

  • Buford Meredith Cross Country Course
  • Burrows-Burleson Tennis Center
  • Christiansburg Aquatic Center
  • English Field (baseball)
  • Football Locker Room Facility
  • Hahn Hurst Basketball Practice Center
  • Indoor Practice Facility
  • James C. Weaver Baseball Center
  • Johnson / Miller Track Complex
  • Merryman Athletic Facility
  • Olympic Sports Weight Room
  • Pete Dye River Course
  • Rector Field House
  • Tech Softball Park
  • Sandra D. Thompson Field
  • War Memorial Pool
  • Wrestling Locker Room / Practice Facility

Residence halls Edit

Ambler Johnston Hall Edit

Ambler Johnston Hall is a large co-ed undergraduate residence hall located on Washington Street across from the Cassell Coliseum parking lot in what is known as the Summit Community.[19] Completed in 1968, the hall is named after Ambler Johnston, a 1904 graduate of Virginia Tech, who was the co-founder of Carneal & Johnston Architects (now Ballou Justice and Upton Architects).

The hall is divided into two wings, commonly referred to as East AJ and West AJ on campus. West AJ is the larger of the two halls and is taller by one story. The wings are connected by commons areas on the first, third, and sixth floors.

West AJ's fourth floor was the location of the first of two attacks during the Virginia Tech shootings on April 16, 2007, which resulted in the shooting deaths of a female resident and a male resident adviser. In early 2010, two students are reported to have broken onto the roof of the larger hall, West Ambler Johnston.[citation needed]

East Ambler Johnston reopened in the fall of 2011 as the Honors Residential College (HRC). The newly renovated East AJ features some rooms with private baths, several apartments where four student share a living room, bath, two bedrooms, and kitchen. Some traditional halls where bathroom facilities are shared by half a floor were retained; however, these too were remodeled. The latest renovation added air conditioning.

In the "bridge" that spans between East and West AJ and on the lower levels, there are meeting rooms, a student kitchen, a game room, a weight/exercise room, a theater, a library, a mail room, and laundry facilities that can be accessed through the university's "laundry web" (students can reserve machines and see if their wash/dry is done via the Internet). Also in the "bridge" is an apartment for the faculty members who are "in residence" in the HRC.

West AJ reopened in the fall of 2012. It houses the university's second Residential College with approximately 800 students and is divided into four houses: Hickory, Hawthorn, Honey Locust, and Holly. The Residential College focuses on building of community values and partnership, with each house holding its own events and having its own government structure.

 
Hillcrest Honors Community

Hillcrest Hall Edit

Hilcrest Honors Community is the smallest residence hall in Virginia Tech at a student capacity of 108. Unlike most of the other residence halls on campus, it is required that all of its occupants maintain a grade point average of 3.50 and it is customary that they live in the building for the duration of their undergraduate education. The Honors Residential College in East Ambler Johnston is the only other residence hall which has the same requirements.

In addition to being a residence hall on the second and third floors, Hillcrest houses Virginia Tech's University Honors offices on the first floor and the Residence Hall Federation office in the basement. Community residents thus have the opportunity to maintain close personal relationships with the Honors staff.

Hillcrest Hall is one of very few buildings and the only residence hall at Virginia Tech not named for a person. The name is derived from its location at the crest of a hill at the east end of Virginia Tech's central Drillfield, between West Campus Drive and the Grove. It is one of the few red brick buildings on a campus known for its "Hokie Stone" architecture.

When women were integrated into VPI, it was the first and only women's dormitory and was built on what was then the far corner of the campus near several large livestock barns used by the College of Agriculture that once stood near where Harper Hall now stands. When Hillcrest opened in 1940 it was promptly dubbed the "skirt barn" by VPI cadets. One of the Honors offices on the first floor used to be a "courting room" when Hillcrest Hall was the women's dormitory. Because visitation was not permitted in the residence hall, and women were not allowed to leave campus on dates, courting took place in this room. Young men would enter the room from one door and the young ladies would enter the room from another. Only a few feet away was the room where the house mother would be there to supervise.

 
Hoge Hall (left) and Pritchard Hall (right)

Hoge Hall Edit

Hoge Hall is located on Washington Street on the Prairie Quad. The building is named for Janie and William Hoge, a local African American couple that hosted several African American students, including Irving L. Peddrew III, between 1953 and 1959, before African American students were permitted to live on campus in 1961.[42] The building was completed in 1966 and houses 811 residents on its eight floors. It also includes the Galileo and Hypatia engineering "living-learning" programs.

Hoge Hall was formerly known as Lee Hall for more than half a century. It was named for Dr. Claudius Lee, an 1896 alumnus of Tech and a professor of electrical engineering who served the university in various capacities for nearly seventy years. In 1997, students in a history class found a page in the 1896 Bugle (Virginia Tech's student yearbook) that seemed to indicate that while an undergraduate, over a century earlier, Claudius Lee had been president of a campus Ku Klux Klan where he was listed as the "Father of Terror" as well as being named "Arch-fiend" of the Pittsylvania Club organization, whose yearbook page featured a black person being lynched. After more than two decades of pressure from students and alumni, Lee Hall was renamed Hoge Hall after the late Janie and William Hoge. Janie and William Hoge were a local African American couple who ran a boarding house in Blacksburg and played a crucial role in the success and well-being of the first African American students attending Virginia Polytechnic Institute in the 1950s. At the time black cadets attending VPI, then a predominately white, predominately male, military institute were not allowed to live in the dorms or eat in the dining halls on campus due to Virginia's Jim Crow laws so they boarded with the Hoges instead.

A panel named by then-president Paul Torgersen to address the issue examined the available historical records about the organization. A Klan expert hired by the university, John Kneebone, determined that the Klan was extinct in Virginia in 1896, leaving open the possibility that this may have been some kind of collegiate society or fraternity attempting to appropriate the image of the Reconstruction era Klan.[43] At the time proposals to rename the building were strongly opposed by many older alumni who had known Claudius Lee during his long tenure as a professor.

The issue of Lee Hall re-emerged in 2004, and the Virginia Tech Commission on Equal Opportunity and Diversity issued recommendations to broaden education on the subject of Claudius Lee and also for strengthening diversity efforts across the university. On August 13, 2020 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors voted to rename Lee Hall, after a petition to rename the building on Change.org gained over 13,000 signatures. Another residence hall, Barringer Hall, named for the sixth president of Virginia Tech, Paul Brandon Barringer, a physician who advocated eugenics and expressed white supremacist views in his early 20th century speeches and writings was also renamed at the same time. This sentiment emerged as part of the broader social movement as a result of the ongoing George Floyd protests.[44]

The building's penthouse, the highest point in Blacksburg, was home to the campus radio station, WUVT-FM's, transmitter until May 2009, when the station vacated Lee Hall as part of the process of upgrading to a new transmitter and transmit location atop Price Mountain.

Oak Lane Community Edit

The Oak Lane Community is located off of the Duck Pond and Virginia Tech Golf course. The community features 15 houses that serve 19 fraternity and sorority chapters. The community is designated as Special Purpose Housing and while the buildings are considered to be private homes, the facilities are owned and maintained by Virginia Tech Housing and Residence Life. Oak Lane is also home to a pilot program, the Innovate Entrepreneurial Living Learning Community.

Slusher Hall Edit

The twelve-storey Slusher Tower built in 1972 is the tallest building in Blacksburg. Slusher Tower, including a three-story annex, Slusher Wing, was originally an all male dorm is a co-ed residence hall, that houses 630 students and is home to the WING and MOSAIC theme housing programs. In 1997, Melinda Marie Somers, 18, a sophomore, died after accidentally falling through an open window on the 8th floor of Slusher Tower, prompting the university to install horizontal bars across windows in the building.[45][46]

The quad formed by Slusher Tower, Slusher Wing, Main Campbell and East Campbell Halls has long been referred to as "Slusher Beach", originating from the use of the area by students to sunbathe and play beach volleyball on its sand court during warm weather.

In 2018 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors approved spending $3.5 million to develop a plan to replace Slusher Hall. Due to its poor condition, Virginia Tech has determined that the 50-year-old high-rise structure should be replaced rather than renovated. The university plans to first build and occupy a new residence hall near the existing Slusher Hall, then demolish Slusher Hall, and construct a second residence hall on the site. The two new residence halls will have a total student occupancy that will equal or exceed the existing Slusher Hall.[47]

 
Virginia Tech's Main Eggleston Hall
 
Pritchard Hall seen from O'Shaughnessy Hall
 
Campbell Hall

Other residence halls Edit

  • Whitehurst Hall – (1962) originally known as Barringer Hall named for Dr. Paul Brandon Barringer is an all-male residence hall. Located in the President's Quad and houses about 220 students. Barringer, a prominent physician who was chairman of the faculty at University of Virginia from 1895 to 1903 (then equivalent to president) and later served as the sixth president of Virginia Tech from 1907 to 1913 advocated eugenics and expressed white supremacist views in many of his early 20th century speeches and writings. In 2020 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors voted to rename the building for alumnus, James Leslie Whitehurst, Jr. ’63, the first black student permitted to live on campus who was later appointed to the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors in 1970.[48][49][50]
  • Brodie Hall – (1957-2015) In 1957 the Second Academic Building (1877) was razed to construct Brodie Hall, the new building incorporated a remodeled Barracks No. 3 (1900). Named for Col. William Mayo Brodie, professor from 1901 to 1932, Brodie Hall served as a barracks for the Corps of Cadets for 58 years. Brodie Hall was demolished in 2015 and replaced by New Cadet Hall, completed in August, 2017.[51]
  • Campbell Hall – (1930) The main building, originally known as the Stone Dormitory or the Civilian Dormitory and later as Barracks No. 8 was completed in 1930. It was the first Hokie Stone dormitory at Virginia Tech and is the oldest building on the Virginia Tech campus still in use as a residence hall. The east wing, originally known as Barracks No. 9, was added in 1939 as a WPA project. In 1952 the building was named for, Theodorick Pryor Campbell, a former professor of modern languages, academic department head and dean of the college. East Campbell is one of three all-female residence halls.
  • Cochrane Hall – (1983) A suite-style residence hall connected to West End Market. It was the first suite style residence hall on the Virginia Tech campus. It is home to many first-year student athletes.
  • Eggleston Hall – (1935) Built as a WPA project, the main building known Main Eggleston was completed in 1935. Two wings known as East Eggleston and West Eggleston were added in the late 1930s. Originally constructed as barracks when Virginia Tech was an all-male military school, Eggleston is now a co-ed residence hall separated by floor. Eggleston Hall is named for the seventh president of Virginia Tech, Joseph Dupuy Eggleston.
  • Graduate Life Center at Donaldson-Brown – (1935) A former hotel and conference center. Its lowest floor is home to the graduate school's administrative offices, classrooms, meeting rooms, and a small Au Bon Pain restaurant. The remaining three floors are graduate residences. The building is named for alumnus, Frank Donaldson Brown. The Graduate Life Center was also the site where Zhu Haiyang decapitated classmate Yang Xin in 2009.[52]
  • Harper Hall – (1999) One of the few suite-style air-conditioned residence halls on campus, it houses 256 residents. Some first-year students are assigned to Harper, often as the result of allergies.
  • Johnson Hall – (1965) An all-female residence hall, located in the President's Quad and houses about 180 students.
  • Lane Hall – (1888-1967) Originally known as Barracks Number 1, The building housed 130 male students until it was converted for use as academic offices in 1967. The building is named for James Henry Lane, the first Commandant of Cadets. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.
  • Major Williams Hall - (1957-1995) Named after Major Lloyd W. Williams, this dorm was opened in 1957 upon the completion of an addition & renovation project that combined Barracks No. 5,(1904) & Barracks No. 6 (1927). In 1995, an addition was constructed and the building was re-purposed for academic use.[53]
  • Miles Hall – (1964) An all-male residence hall located in the President's Quad and houses about 217 students. Miles Hall is named for Clarence Paul "Sally" Miles, known as "Mr. VPI," who spent nearly 59 years at Virginia Tech in a variety of capacities.
  • Pearson Hall West – (2017) Opened in August, 2017, New Cadet Hall is an exact mirror duplicate of Pearson Hall East (2015) and is designed to house approximately one half of the members of the Corps of Cadets.
  • Monteith Hall – (1949-2017) A co-ed residence hall, that housed both civilian and Corps of Cadets students, formerly located in the Upper Quad just west of the bend in Turner Street next to the Moss Arts Center. Monteith Hall was demolished in 2017. It was named for alumnus and Medal of Honor recipient, Jimmie W. Monteith.
  • New Residence Hall East – (1998) An air-conditioned suite-style residence hall that opened in 1999 on the Prairie; former site of Miles Stadium, Lane Stadium's predecessor.
  • New Hall West – (2009) Virginia Tech's newest residence hall. Its ground floor houses live-in professional staff and its first floor is dedicated to Student Affairs offices. The top three floors are air-conditioned double-occupancy sized rooms reserved for upperclassmen.
  • Newman Hall  (1964)– A co-ed residence hall located in the President's Quad. Co-ed by floor and home to the WORLD and W.E.L.L theme housing program. It is named for the tenth president of Virginia Tech, Walter Stephenson Newman.
  • O'Shaughnessy Hall – (1966) A mid-sized co-ed residence hall, by floor, it houses many upper-class students.
  • Payne Hall – (1993) The first residence hall at Virginia Tech to offer air conditioned rooms; a co-ed residence hall that offers both suite-style and traditional accommodations, it houses returning students and transfers only.
  • Pearson Hall East – (2015) Pearson Hall is named after alumni James "J" and Renae Pearson. Dedicated on November 20, 2015, Pearson Hall replaced Rasche Hall (1957-2013). Totaling 234 dorm rooms, Pearson Hall is designed to house approximately one half of the members of the Corps of Cadets.[54][55]
  • Peddrew-Yates Residence Hall – (1998) Home to the Residential Leadership Community (RLC), a suite-style air-conditioned residence hall.
  • Preston and Olin Building – (1872-1888) The Preston and Olin building was originally constructed 1855 to house the Preston and Olin Institute. The three story red brick edifice facing Main Street contained three recitation rooms, a chapel, and 24 lodging rooms. After the founding of Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College, the Preston and Olin building was used as a residence hall until 1888. After students moved into Barracks No. 1, (now known as Lane Hall), the Preston and Olin building was remodeled and converted into the Machine Shop. It was destroyed by fire in 1913.
  • Pritchard Hall – (1967) Was the second-largest all-male residence hall on the East Coast for over 40 years. It was renovated and made co-ed in the fall of 2009 and houses about 1,040 students, mostly freshmen. This residence hall is the largest at Virginia Tech.
  • Rasche Hall – (1957-2013) In 1957, the First Academic Building (1876) was razed to construct Rasche Hall, The new building also incorporated a remodeled Barracks No. 2(1894), and served as a barracks for the Corps of Cadets until its demolition in 2013.[56] Pearson Hall was constructed on the site in 2014-2015.
  • Shanks Hall – (1957-1990s) In 1957, Science Hall also known as Barracks No 7 was razed to construct Shanks Hall. Named after David Carey Shanks, Jr., who served as commandant of cadets from 1895 to 1898, this dorm opened in 1958 and incorporated a renovated Barracks No. 4 (1902). Shanks Hall housed 320 men until it was converted to house 302 women in 1970. It was converted to academic office space in the mid 1990s. The building was renovated in 2001 and a small addition was made.[57]
  • Thomas Hall – (1949-2017) A co-ed residence hall that housed 355 students. The building was formerly located in the Upper Quad across Old Turner Street from the Power Plant. Thomas Hall was demolished in 2017. It was named for alumnus and Medal of Honor recipient, Herbert Joseph Thomas.
  • Vawter Hall – (1962) A co-ed residence hall located in the President's Quad near Owens Dining Hall and Hokie Grill. Vawter was an all-male residence hall until 2013, when it was made co-ed. The building is named for Charles E. Vawter who served on the board of visitors from 1886 to 1900 and was rector from 1889 to 1900.
  • Women's Auxiliary Dormitory – (1963-1966) Built in 1921 as faculty housing and originally known as the Extension Apartment House the building was remodeled 1963 for use as a women's dormitory to house 34 female students. In 1966 it was converted to academic offices and used by various departments until it was destroyed by fire in 1971. The University Bookstore now occupies the site.[58]

Living Learning Communities Edit

Virginia Tech offers 13 for on-campus students. They serve as an alternative experience for their residents and communities range from entrepreneurship to community service.

Name Community Type Focus Location
Orion Academic Sciences New Residence Hall East
Galileo Academic Men in Engineering Hoge Hall
Hillcrest Community Enhanced Learning Residential Honors Hillcrest Hall
Honors Residential College Residential College Residential Honors East Ambler Johnston
Hypatia Academic Women in Engineering Hoge Hall
Innovate Enhanced Learning Entrepreneurship Pritchard Hall
Morril Enhanced Learning Sustainability Pritchard Hall
Residential College at West Ambler Johnston Residential College Residential Honors West Ambler Johnston
Residential Leadership Community Enhanced Learning Leadership Development Peddrew-Yates Hall
Serve Enhanced Learning Community/Volunteer Service Pritchard Hall
The Well Themed Housing Substance-Free Newman Hall
The World Themed Housing International Students Newman Hall
Thrive Enhanced Learning Strengths Development Pritchard Hall

Residence Hall Federation Edit

The Residence Hall Federation (RHF) is a University Chartered Student Organization. This organization exists to serve the 9,000 on-campus residents through hall councils in each residence hall. The RHF is composed of 23 hall councils, representing the residents of each hall, and three community councils, which represent two or more halls that share a common trait. Each individual hall council receives a programming budget of $1 per resident (or $400 if there are fewer than 400 residents) from the Student Programs office and from the RHF budget. The RHF Officer Group consists of 16 members, composing an Executive Board and a Board of Directors.

Like the Resident Advisors employed by the school, the Hall Councils produce programs that entertain and educate the residents of the buildings that they serve. These programs range from movie nights to exam study breaks. In addition, the RHF officer group also puts on campus-wide programs, under the command of the Director of Programs. Traditionally, the campus-wide programs have been Campus-Kickoff, Pizza Bonanza, and Hokies Hold'Em. The RHF also performs a number of community service projects.

Dining halls Edit

 
D2 Dining Hall on the second floor, with Deet's Place, DX, and The General Store on the ground floor

Dietrick Dining Center Edit

Dietrick Dining Center, or Dietrick Hall, is the largest of Virginia Tech's six dining facilities, seating 1,100 and serving on average 3,758 students daily. The building opened in 1970 at a cost of $2.8 million.[59]

The main dining area, now called "D2", was known as the "Depot at Dietrick" prior to a $6.5 million renovation completed in 2004 that converted the hall from a cafeteria-style facility to one that more closely resembles a food court.[60] The building also contains the Dietrick General Store, an extension of the University Bookstore; "Deet's Place", a coffee and ice cream shop; and the Dietrick Express, a fast food à la carte facility.

 
West End Market

West End Market Edit

West End Market opened in 1999 as Virginia Tech's second major food court dining facility. Adjoined to Cochrane Hall, this facility was known as Cochrane Dining Hall until it closed in 1997 for remodeling.[61]

West End Market was recognized in 1999 by the National Association of College and University Food Services as the best university specialty restaurant in the country and has been rated by the Princeton Review as one of the Top 3 school dining facilities multiple times, achieving the #1 spot in 2006.

West End Market offers students meals ranging from burgers, sandwiches, wraps, and pizza (cooked in a their own stone hearth pizza oven), to fresh grilled fish, steaks, and lobster taken from JP's Chop House Lobster tank.[62]

Owens Hall Edit

Owens Hall opened in 1940 as a replacement for Virginia Tech's military mess hall. It was closed and completely renovated in the early 1990s.

The Food Court contains twelve a la carte specialty shops. Owens Hall was voted by Joe Frett Weekly to have the "Best Philly Cheesesteaks in the U.S." In 1997, a section of the building called the Hokie Grill & Co. was remodeled to feature Chick-fil-A and Pizza Hut franchises. In its first year, the Chick-fil-A became the top-selling of all Chick-fil-A franchises located on college campuses.[63] Other shops featured include Wǎn, featuring Asian cuisine, Tazón, with Mexican dishes, and Frank's, a sandwich shop named after former football coach Frank Beamer.[64]

Owens Hall is located on Kent Street in the Lower Quad.

Turner Place Edit

Opened in August 2012, Turner Place at Lavery Hall is the newest dining hall at Virginia Tech. It features: Atomic Pizzeria, Jamba Juice, 1872 Fire Grill, Qdoba Mexican Grill, Origami (a hibachi grill), Soup Garden, Dolci e Caffe, and Bruegger's Bagels. There is also a 256-seat dining hall that is for the Corps of Cadets.[65]

Other dining facilities Edit

  • Au Bon Pain (located at Squires Student Center and another located in Goodwin Hall)
  • Burger '37 (located at Squires Student Center)
  • DXpress (located at Dietrick Hall)
  • Vet Med Cafe (located in the Vet Med Commons)

Miscellaneous buildings Edit

 
Burruss Hall as seen from the Drillfield
 
The Burruss Hall Tunnel

Burruss Hall Edit

Burruss Hall is the main administration building, it also contains a 3,003-seat auditorium and houses several departments in the College of Architecture and Urban Studies. It consists of the original building, completed in June 1936 (cost $428,404; 77,080 sq ft (7,161 m2) ); a west wing and rear addition, built in 1968 (cost $1,536,899; 60,503 sq ft (5,620.9 m2)); and an east wing, built in 1970 (cost $593,729; 20,638 sq ft (1,917.3 m2)). The cornerstone of the original building was laid at the 1935 commencement; the first commencement was held in the auditorium in June 1936. An electronic carillon, costing $28,000, was added in 1958 and was dedicated at Homecoming that year. It was originally known as the Teaching and Administration Building.

Julian Ashby Burruss (1876–1947) was President from 1919 to 1945. The first alumnus president, Burruss guided VPI through tremendous increases in faculty, student body, and degree offerings; vast growth in the physical plant; and efficient changes in administrative structure. He successfully pushed to admit women and shortened the military requirement to two years, setting the stage for a larger civilian student body. During his tenure, Radford College became the Women's Division of VPI.

 
Johnston Student Center

G. Burke Johnston Student Center Edit

The G. Burke Johnston Student Center (most commonly called GBJ) contains student activities rooms also used as classrooms during the day, a Subway food court, and study areas. The Add Caldwell Lounge is located on the upper level, named for Virginia Tech's first student, Addison Caldwell.[66] On the bottom floor of this three-story building is the entrance to the Pamplin tunnel, which connects this building with the adjacent Pamplin Hall; there is also a bridge on the third floor connecting it to Burruss Hall.

 
Perry Street Parking Deck

Perry Street Parking Deck Edit

Completed in 2010, the Perry Street Parking Deck is a five-level parking deck that can accommodate 1,300 vehicles. Parking Services now maintains a satellite located on the first floor of the parking deck. In the spring of 2012, a $1.2 million project, funded through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009, installed 480 solar panels on top of the parking deck. The solar panels cover an area of 16,000 square feet and are expected to generate about 136,000 kilowatt-hours annually, or about 13% of the total parking deck's power usage.[67]

Power plant Edit

A campus landmark, the power plant is located across Old Turner Street from the upper quad. Its 180-foot (55 m) chimney can be seen from many places throughout Blacksburg. The plant is a cogeneration facility that provides electricity, heat and steam for the campus.[68]

Other miscellaneous buildings Edit

  • Alumni Hall
  • Armory
  • Cranwell International Center
  • The Grove (President's Residence)
  • Health and Safety Building
  • Henderson Hall (formerly the President's Residence from 1876-1902)
  • Information/Visitors Center
  • McComas Hall[69]
  • Media Building
  • Moss Arts Center (formerly Shultz Dining Hall)
  • Price House (razed 2005)[70]
  • Smith House
  • Solitude
  • Squires Student Center
  • Student Services Building
  • University Bookstore
  • University Club (razed 2018)
  • Wallace Annex (formerly the Home Management House)
  • War Memorial Chapel
  • War Memorial Gymnasium
  • Wright House

Non-building campus landmarks Edit

 
Hokie Stone on O'Shaughnessy Hall
 
The Duck Pond

Hokie Stone Edit

On the Blacksburg campus, the majority of the buildings incorporate Hokie Stone as a building material. Hokie Stone is a medley of different-colored limestone, often including dolomite. Each block of Hokie Stone is some combination of gray, brown, black, pink, orange, and maroon. The limestone is mined from various quarries in Southwestern Virginia, Tennessee, and Alabama, one of which has been operated by the university since the 1950s.

The Duck Pond Edit

The Duck Pond is a man-made water feature created in the 1930s, situated along the northwest portion of the Blacksburg campus. The most notable feature is a gazebo located on its south side connected to picnic and seating areas by pedestrian pathways. It is adjacent to Solitude, a Greek-revival home built in the early 1800s, the oldest structure on campus.[71]

Gargoyles Edit

There are 14 gargoyles which appear on Tech buildings, especially older buildings. They appear on Smyth, Hillcrest, Saunders, and Eggleston Halls. Although some, like those on the Eggleston archway, are functional, the majority are merely ornamental. Among the more distinctive gargoyles on campus are the "cowgoyles" seen on some agricultural buildings.[72]

 
April 16 Memorial

April 16 Memorial Edit

The April 16 Memorial is located in the center of the side of the Drillfield in front of Burruss Hall. The memorial consists of 32 Hokie Stones, one for each victim, and a stone in the center to honor all of the fallen and injured victims. On the night of April 16, 2007, students placed pieces of Hokie Stone in a semi-circle at the base of the reviewing stand overlooking the Drillfield, and this then led to the creation of the present-day memorial.[73]

See also Edit

References Edit

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  68. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2006-10-03.
  69. ^ "McComas Hall". www.vt.edu. March 7, 2016. 2016.
  70. ^ . Virginia Tech Women's Center. 2004-09-11. Archived from the original on 2004-09-11. Retrieved 2007-04-05.
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External links Edit

  • Virginia Tech maps
  • Virginia Tech Residence Hall Federation
  • Link to the April 16, 2007, school shooting

campus, virginia, tech, main, campus, virginia, tech, located, blacksburg, virginia, central, campus, roughly, bordered, prices, fork, road, northwest, plantation, road, west, main, street, east, route, bypass, south, although, also, several, thousand, acres, . The main campus of Virginia Tech is located in Blacksburg Virginia the central campus is roughly bordered by Prices Fork Road to the northwest Plantation Road to the west Main Street to the east and U S Route 460 bypass to the south although it also has several thousand acres beyond the central campus The Virginia Tech campus consists of 130 buildings on approximately 2 600 acres 11 km2 2 3 It was the site of the Draper s Meadow massacre in 1755 during the French and Indian War Virginia Tech CampusMottoUt Prosim Latin Location37 13 30 N 80 25 30 W 37 225 N 80 425 W 37 225 80 425ColorsChicago maroon and Burnt orange 1 MascotHokieBirdWebsitewww vt edu Contents 1 National Capital Region and Branch Campus Centers 2 Main Campus Academic buildings 2 1 Agnew Hall 2 2 Bishop Favrao Hall 2 3 Burchard Hall 2 4 Burruss Hall 2 5 Cowgill Hall 2 6 Davidson Hall 2 7 Derring Hall 2 8 Durham Hall 2 9 Norris Hall 2 10 Military Building 2 10 1 Joseph F Ware Jr Advanced Engineering Lab 2 11 Other academic buildings 2 12 Blacksburg Academic facilities 3 Athletics buildings 3 1 Lane Stadium 3 2 Cassell Coliseum 3 3 Other athletics facilities 4 Residence halls 4 1 Ambler Johnston Hall 4 2 Hillcrest Hall 4 3 Hoge Hall 4 4 Oak Lane Community 4 5 Slusher Hall 4 6 Other residence halls 4 7 Living Learning Communities 4 8 Residence Hall Federation 5 Dining halls 5 1 Dietrick Dining Center 5 2 West End Market 5 3 Owens Hall 5 4 Turner Place 5 5 Other dining facilities 6 Miscellaneous buildings 6 1 Burruss Hall 6 2 G Burke Johnston Student Center 6 3 Perry Street Parking Deck 6 4 Power plant 6 5 Other miscellaneous buildings 7 Non building campus landmarks 7 1 Hokie Stone 7 2 The Duck Pond 7 3 Gargoyles 7 4 April 16 Memorial 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksNational Capital Region and Branch Campus Centers EditSee also Virginia Tech National Capital Region Virginia Tech s presence in the National Capital Region is continually expanding Current locations include Alexandria Arlington Fairfax Falls Church Leesburg Manassas and Middleburg The university also has several commonwealth branch campus centers Hampton Roads Virginia Beach Richmond Roanoke and the Southwest Virginia Higher Education Center in Abingdon 4 5 The university also owns the Center for European Studies and Architecture in Ticino Switzerland 6 Main Campus Academic buildings Edit nbsp Burruss Hall the main administration building and iconic symbol of the Virginia Tech Blacksburg campus nbsp Cowgill Hall with Burchard Hall in the foreground nbsp Norris HallAgnew Hall Edit Originally known as the Home Economics Building Agnew Hall was constructed in 1940 at a cost of 42 525 In 1949 it was named in honor of Ella Graham Agnew the first woman to receive a field appointment from the U S Department of Agriculture The building is used primarily by the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences In 2009 a 1 6 million renovation took place which added lab space to the first floor for the Department of Biological Systems Engineering 7 Bishop Favrao Hall Edit Bishop Favrao Hall is home to the Department of Building Construction which is under the College of Architecture and Urban Studies CAUS and the Myers Lawson School of Construction Much of the building has its systems exposed so that students can see them and learn about the systems Bishop Favrao was completed in December 2007 and is named after Richard Bishop and William Favrao the Department of Building Construction s founder and department head until 1977 8 Burchard Hall Edit Constructed in 1998 and named after Charles Burchard the founding dean of the College of Architecture and Urban Studies between 1964 and 1979 Burchard Hall provides studio space for students in the architecture and industrial design programs The building also provides office and classroom spaces as well as specialized studio space Burchard Hall is actually constructed underground and has four pyramidal skylights that illuminate the studio spaces below One can access Burchard Hall via either of the three access portals on the roof or through the ground floor entrances Burchard Hall also has a walkway connecting it to the nearby Cowgill Hall 9 Burruss Hall Edit Constructed in 1936 facing the center of the drill field and originally known as the Teaching and Administration Building Burruss Hall is the main administration building on campus and the iconic symbol of Virginia Tech A west wing and rear addition were built in 1968 and an east wing was added in 1970 It contains a 3 003 seat auditorium a venue where major events such as commencement presidential speeches concerts and performing arts shows are held Additionally the first floor of the building houses faculty offices studios and classrooms for the College of Architecture and Urban Studies The building is named for the eighth president of Virginia Tech Julian Ashby Burruss 10 Cowgill Hall Edit Cowgill Hall located on Perry Street is the home of Virginia Tech s College of Architecture and Urban Studies It was completed in 1969 and is named for Clinton Harriman Cowgill who retired in 1956 after 28 years as the architecture department head 11 In 2006 Cowgill Hall was named the winner of the Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects Test of Time Award This award is presented annually to a building that has served the same function for at least 25 years 12 13 Davidson Hall Edit Davidson Hall contains office space teaching labs and classrooms Originally constructed in 1928 additions to the structure were completed in 1933 and 1938 the structure was also renovated between 1964 and 1965 Named in honor of Robert James Davidson the Dean of the Department of Applied Sciences it was the department home for the Department of Chemistry Davidson was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science a member of the Washington Academy of Science a member of the American Chemical Society and served as the President of the National Association of Official Agricultural Chemists in 1903 Davidson was also a delegate to the International Congress of Applied Chemistry at London in 1909 14 In 2012 a 31 million renovation of Davidson Hall broke ground When completed Davidson Hall will have modern research laboratories office space new classrooms and a 300 person auditorium As of May 2014 update substantial completion was expected in May 2014 15 Derring Hall Edit Derring Hall a five story building was constructed in 1969 and contains offices classroom space and laboratories for primarily the biological sciences and geosciences programs at Virginia Tech The building was named after Paul Neyron Derring a popular administrator with the students who was stricken blind at the age of thirteen Derring served on the State Commission for the Visually Handicapped and served on the Blacksburg Town Council 16 Durham Hall Edit Durham Hall a 16 million project 17 opened in 1998 and was called New Engineering Building or The NEB until 2001 It was named in honor of Fred D Durham co founder of the Dover Corporation a Fortune 500 manufacturing company located in New York City 18 Norris Hall Edit Norris Hall is a four story 1 floor below grade Hokie Stone academic building located between Burruss and Holden Halls 19 The two wings of the building built in 1960 and 1962 encompass approximately 70 000 gross square feet 20 and house the main office for the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics room 219 21 and used to house the Dean s Office for the College of Engineering room 333 22 The building has been home to the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics room 223 23 for almost fifty years and is named for Earl Bertram Norris who served as dean of engineering for twenty four years between 1928 and 1952 24 Norris Hall was also the location of the second shooting attack during the Virginia Tech shootings on April 16 2007 The building was the site of 31 of the 33 fatalities including the gunman and all 17 wounded faculty and students The building was closed for the rest of the 2007 spring semester and reopened with access limited to faculty and students with legitimate business inside at remaining offices and laboratories on June 18 2007 25 On December 20 2007 it was announced that the second floor of Norris would be renovated and become home to the Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention 26 On April 10 2009 a ceremony was held to commemorate the reopening of the west wing of Norris Hall The area consists of six reconfigured rooms and laboratories and is home to the new Center for Peace Studies and Violence Prevention as well as the Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics The renovation project was completed in March 2009 at a cost of approximately one million dollars many goods and services were donated by individuals and contractors in support of the project 27 As department head of Engineering Science and Mechanics Dr Ishwar Puri played a leading role in the reoccupation of Norris Hall where his department is housed 28 Among other roles he spoke at the April 10 ceremony 29 Military Building Edit Originally constructed in 1936 and renovated in 1998 the Military Building is located on the Upper Quad It is the base of operations for the Virginia Tech Rescue Squad and home to the Army Navy and Air Force ROTC programs It also houses the College of Engineering s Joseph F Ware Jr Advanced Engineering Lab 30 Joseph F Ware Jr Advanced Engineering Lab Edit nbsp Joseph F Ware Jr nbsp Lane Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2015 31 nbsp The Drillfield looking towards Newman LibraryWork began on the Joseph F Ware Jr Advanced Engineering Lab Ware Lab in 1997 in a collaboration of Joseph F Ware Jr his wife Jennifer Jenna Ware MSW LCSW ATP CFI and Hayden Griffin Ph D of Virginia Tech and the Ware Lab was opened September 4 1998 The Lab is named after its founder and 1937 Mechanical Engineering Alumnus Joseph F Ware Jr 32 As a part of the College of Engineering the Ware Lab is home to many student based research and design projects Focused on a hands on learning environment students are encouraged to participate in these projects as early as their freshman year The Klages Machine Shop is also located within the Ware Lab and is equipped with various machine tools used for project manufacturing including two Numerical Control CNC Machines 33 The lab is home to such notable teams as the Hybrid Electric Vehicle Team Formula SAE VT Motorsports BOLT all electric motorcycle team and the Baja SAE team Other teams in the lab include AISC Steel Bridge SBT Design Build Fly DBF and the Autonomous Aerial Vehicle Team AAVT nbsp Torgersen Bridge on Alumni Mall nbsp Moss Arts Center nbsp Litton Reaves Hall contains classrooms and labs for the Department of Animal and Poultry Sciences nbsp Hutcheson Hall houses offices and classroomsOther academic buildings Edit Other academic buildings on the Blacksburg campus 34 Art and Design Learning Center 35 Cheatham Hall 36 Dairy Science Complex 37 Engel Hall formerly the Biochemistry Building Femoyer Hall Food Science and Technology Fralin Biotechnology Center Goodwin Hall formerly Signature Engineering Building 38 Hahn Hall formerly Chemistry Physics Hancock Hall Holden Hall Hutcheson Hall Lane Hall formerly Barracks No 1 Liberal Arts Building formerly the YMCA building Litton Reaves Hall formerly the Animal Sciences Building Major Williams Hall McBryde Hall Newman Library Pamplin Hall formerly Commerce Hall Patton Hall Price Hall formerly Agricultural Hall Randolph Hall Robeson Hall Sandy Hall formerly the Extension Division Building Saunders Hall formerly the Dairy Science Building Seitz Hall formerly the Agricultural Engineering Building Shanks Hall Smyth Hall formerly the Natural Science Building Theatre 101 Torgersen Hall Virginia Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine Wallace Hall Whittemore Hall Williams Hall formerly the Academic Science Building Blacksburg Academic facilities Edit nbsp Agnew Hall nbsp Burchard Hall nbsp Bishop Favrao Hall nbsp Davidson Hall nbsp Derring Hall nbsp Wallace Hall nbsp Price Hall nbsp Saunders Hall nbsp Seitz Hall nbsp Patton HallAthletics buildings Edit nbsp Aerial view of Lane Stadium 2011 nbsp Cassell Coliseum indoor sports arena nbsp English Field baseball stadium nbsp Virginia Tech students and fans rush the field after Virginia Tech defeated the Miami Hurricanes 31 7 on November 1 2003 39 Lane Stadium Edit Main article Lane Stadium Lane Stadium is the stadium for Virginia Tech s football team It opened in 1965 has been rated as having the number one home field advantage in all of college football 40 It replaced Miles Stadium a smaller facility that once stood directly behind the War Memorial Gym Cassell Coliseum Edit Main article Cassell Coliseum Cassell Coliseum is a 10 052 seat multi purpose arena in Blacksburg Virginia The arena opened in 1961 It is home to the Virginia Tech Hokies men s and women s basketball teams Other athletics facilities Edit Additional athletic facilities 41 Buford Meredith Cross Country Course Burrows Burleson Tennis Center Christiansburg Aquatic Center English Field baseball Football Locker Room Facility Hahn Hurst Basketball Practice Center Indoor Practice Facility James C Weaver Baseball Center Johnson Miller Track Complex Merryman Athletic Facility Olympic Sports Weight Room Pete Dye River Course Rector Field House Tech Softball Park Sandra D Thompson Field War Memorial Pool Wrestling Locker Room Practice FacilityResidence halls EditAmbler Johnston Hall Edit Ambler Johnston Hall is a large co ed undergraduate residence hall located on Washington Street across from the Cassell Coliseum parking lot in what is known as the Summit Community 19 Completed in 1968 the hall is named after Ambler Johnston a 1904 graduate of Virginia Tech who was the co founder of Carneal amp Johnston Architects now Ballou Justice and Upton Architects The hall is divided into two wings commonly referred to as East AJ and West AJ on campus West AJ is the larger of the two halls and is taller by one story The wings are connected by commons areas on the first third and sixth floors West AJ s fourth floor was the location of the first of two attacks during the Virginia Tech shootings on April 16 2007 which resulted in the shooting deaths of a female resident and a male resident adviser In early 2010 two students are reported to have broken onto the roof of the larger hall West Ambler Johnston citation needed East Ambler Johnston reopened in the fall of 2011 as the Honors Residential College HRC The newly renovated East AJ features some rooms with private baths several apartments where four student share a living room bath two bedrooms and kitchen Some traditional halls where bathroom facilities are shared by half a floor were retained however these too were remodeled The latest renovation added air conditioning In the bridge that spans between East and West AJ and on the lower levels there are meeting rooms a student kitchen a game room a weight exercise room a theater a library a mail room and laundry facilities that can be accessed through the university s laundry web students can reserve machines and see if their wash dry is done via the Internet Also in the bridge is an apartment for the faculty members who are in residence in the HRC West AJ reopened in the fall of 2012 It houses the university s second Residential College with approximately 800 students and is divided into four houses Hickory Hawthorn Honey Locust and Holly The Residential College focuses on building of community values and partnership with each house holding its own events and having its own government structure nbsp Hillcrest Honors CommunityHillcrest Hall Edit Hilcrest Honors Community is the smallest residence hall in Virginia Tech at a student capacity of 108 Unlike most of the other residence halls on campus it is required that all of its occupants maintain a grade point average of 3 50 and it is customary that they live in the building for the duration of their undergraduate education The Honors Residential College in East Ambler Johnston is the only other residence hall which has the same requirements In addition to being a residence hall on the second and third floors Hillcrest houses Virginia Tech s University Honors offices on the first floor and the Residence Hall Federation office in the basement Community residents thus have the opportunity to maintain close personal relationships with the Honors staff Hillcrest Hall is one of very few buildings and the only residence hall at Virginia Tech not named for a person The name is derived from its location at the crest of a hill at the east end of Virginia Tech s central Drillfield between West Campus Drive and the Grove It is one of the few red brick buildings on a campus known for its Hokie Stone architecture When women were integrated into VPI it was the first and only women s dormitory and was built on what was then the far corner of the campus near several large livestock barns used by the College of Agriculture that once stood near where Harper Hall now stands When Hillcrest opened in 1940 it was promptly dubbed the skirt barn by VPI cadets One of the Honors offices on the first floor used to be a courting room when Hillcrest Hall was the women s dormitory Because visitation was not permitted in the residence hall and women were not allowed to leave campus on dates courting took place in this room Young men would enter the room from one door and the young ladies would enter the room from another Only a few feet away was the room where the house mother would be there to supervise nbsp Hoge Hall left and Pritchard Hall right Hoge Hall Edit Hoge Hall is located on Washington Street on the Prairie Quad The building is named for Janie and William Hoge a local African American couple that hosted several African American students including Irving L Peddrew III between 1953 and 1959 before African American students were permitted to live on campus in 1961 42 The building was completed in 1966 and houses 811 residents on its eight floors It also includes the Galileo and Hypatia engineering living learning programs Hoge Hall was formerly known as Lee Hall for more than half a century It was named for Dr Claudius Lee an 1896 alumnus of Tech and a professor of electrical engineering who served the university in various capacities for nearly seventy years In 1997 students in a history class found a page in the 1896 Bugle Virginia Tech s student yearbook that seemed to indicate that while an undergraduate over a century earlier Claudius Lee had been president of a campus Ku Klux Klan where he was listed as the Father of Terror as well as being named Arch fiend of the Pittsylvania Club organization whose yearbook page featured a black person being lynched After more than two decades of pressure from students and alumni Lee Hall was renamed Hoge Hall after the late Janie and William Hoge Janie and William Hoge were a local African American couple who ran a boarding house in Blacksburg and played a crucial role in the success and well being of the first African American students attending Virginia Polytechnic Institute in the 1950s At the time black cadets attending VPI then a predominately white predominately male military institute were not allowed to live in the dorms or eat in the dining halls on campus due to Virginia s Jim Crow laws so they boarded with the Hoges instead A panel named by then president Paul Torgersen to address the issue examined the available historical records about the organization A Klan expert hired by the university John Kneebone determined that the Klan was extinct in Virginia in 1896 leaving open the possibility that this may have been some kind of collegiate society or fraternity attempting to appropriate the image of the Reconstruction era Klan 43 At the time proposals to rename the building were strongly opposed by many older alumni who had known Claudius Lee during his long tenure as a professor The issue of Lee Hall re emerged in 2004 and the Virginia Tech Commission on Equal Opportunity and Diversity issued recommendations to broaden education on the subject of Claudius Lee and also for strengthening diversity efforts across the university On August 13 2020 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors voted to rename Lee Hall after a petition to rename the building on Change org gained over 13 000 signatures Another residence hall Barringer Hall named for the sixth president of Virginia Tech Paul Brandon Barringer a physician who advocated eugenics and expressed white supremacist views in his early 20th century speeches and writings was also renamed at the same time This sentiment emerged as part of the broader social movement as a result of the ongoing George Floyd protests 44 The building s penthouse the highest point in Blacksburg was home to the campus radio station WUVT FM s transmitter until May 2009 when the station vacated Lee Hall as part of the process of upgrading to a new transmitter and transmit location atop Price Mountain Oak Lane Community Edit The Oak Lane Community is located off of the Duck Pond and Virginia Tech Golf course The community features 15 houses that serve 19 fraternity and sorority chapters The community is designated as Special Purpose Housing and while the buildings are considered to be private homes the facilities are owned and maintained by Virginia Tech Housing and Residence Life Oak Lane is also home to a pilot program the Innovate Entrepreneurial Living Learning Community Slusher Hall Edit The twelve storey Slusher Tower built in 1972 is the tallest building in Blacksburg Slusher Tower including a three story annex Slusher Wing was originally an all male dorm is a co ed residence hall that houses 630 students and is home to the WING and MOSAIC theme housing programs In 1997 Melinda Marie Somers 18 a sophomore died after accidentally falling through an open window on the 8th floor of Slusher Tower prompting the university to install horizontal bars across windows in the building 45 46 The quad formed by Slusher Tower Slusher Wing Main Campbell and East Campbell Halls has long been referred to as Slusher Beach originating from the use of the area by students to sunbathe and play beach volleyball on its sand court during warm weather In 2018 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors approved spending 3 5 million to develop a plan to replace Slusher Hall Due to its poor condition Virginia Tech has determined that the 50 year old high rise structure should be replaced rather than renovated The university plans to first build and occupy a new residence hall near the existing Slusher Hall then demolish Slusher Hall and construct a second residence hall on the site The two new residence halls will have a total student occupancy that will equal or exceed the existing Slusher Hall 47 nbsp Virginia Tech s Main Eggleston Hall nbsp Pritchard Hall seen from O Shaughnessy Hall nbsp Campbell HallOther residence halls Edit Whitehurst Hall 1962 originally known as Barringer Hall named for Dr Paul Brandon Barringer is an all male residence hall Located in the President s Quad and houses about 220 students Barringer a prominent physician who was chairman of the faculty at University of Virginia from 1895 to 1903 then equivalent to president and later served as the sixth president of Virginia Tech from 1907 to 1913 advocated eugenics and expressed white supremacist views in many of his early 20th century speeches and writings In 2020 the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors voted to rename the building for alumnus James Leslie Whitehurst Jr 63 the first black student permitted to live on campus who was later appointed to the Virginia Tech Board of Visitors in 1970 48 49 50 Brodie Hall 1957 2015 In 1957 the Second Academic Building 1877 was razed to construct Brodie Hall the new building incorporated a remodeled Barracks No 3 1900 Named for Col William Mayo Brodie professor from 1901 to 1932 Brodie Hall served as a barracks for the Corps of Cadets for 58 years Brodie Hall was demolished in 2015 and replaced by New Cadet Hall completed in August 2017 51 Campbell Hall 1930 The main building originally known as the Stone Dormitory or the Civilian Dormitory and later as Barracks No 8 was completed in 1930 It was the first Hokie Stone dormitory at Virginia Tech and is the oldest building on the Virginia Tech campus still in use as a residence hall The east wing originally known as Barracks No 9 was added in 1939 as a WPA project In 1952 the building was named for Theodorick Pryor Campbell a former professor of modern languages academic department head and dean of the college East Campbell is one of three all female residence halls Cochrane Hall 1983 A suite style residence hall connected to West End Market It was the first suite style residence hall on the Virginia Tech campus It is home to many first year student athletes Eggleston Hall 1935 Built as a WPA project the main building known Main Eggleston was completed in 1935 Two wings known as East Eggleston and West Eggleston were added in the late 1930s Originally constructed as barracks when Virginia Tech was an all male military school Eggleston is now a co ed residence hall separated by floor Eggleston Hall is named for the seventh president of Virginia Tech Joseph Dupuy Eggleston Graduate Life Center at Donaldson Brown 1935 A former hotel and conference center Its lowest floor is home to the graduate school s administrative offices classrooms meeting rooms and a small Au Bon Pain restaurant The remaining three floors are graduate residences The building is named for alumnus Frank Donaldson Brown The Graduate Life Center was also the site where Zhu Haiyang decapitated classmate Yang Xin in 2009 52 Harper Hall 1999 One of the few suite style air conditioned residence halls on campus it houses 256 residents Some first year students are assigned to Harper often as the result of allergies Johnson Hall 1965 An all female residence hall located in the President s Quad and houses about 180 students Lane Hall 1888 1967 Originally known as Barracks Number 1 The building housed 130 male students until it was converted for use as academic offices in 1967 The building is named for James Henry Lane the first Commandant of Cadets It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2015 Major Williams Hall 1957 1995 Named after Major Lloyd W Williams this dorm was opened in 1957 upon the completion of an addition amp renovation project that combined Barracks No 5 1904 amp Barracks No 6 1927 In 1995 an addition was constructed and the building was re purposed for academic use 53 Miles Hall 1964 An all male residence hall located in the President s Quad and houses about 217 students Miles Hall is named for Clarence Paul Sally Miles known as Mr VPI who spent nearly 59 years at Virginia Tech in a variety of capacities Pearson Hall West 2017 Opened in August 2017 New Cadet Hall is an exact mirror duplicate of Pearson Hall East 2015 and is designed to house approximately one half of the members of the Corps of Cadets Monteith Hall 1949 2017 A co ed residence hall that housed both civilian and Corps of Cadets students formerly located in the Upper Quad just west of the bend in Turner Street next to the Moss Arts Center Monteith Hall was demolished in 2017 It was named for alumnus and Medal of Honor recipient Jimmie W Monteith New Residence Hall East 1998 An air conditioned suite style residence hall that opened in 1999 on the Prairie former site of Miles Stadium Lane Stadium s predecessor New Hall West 2009 Virginia Tech s newest residence hall Its ground floor houses live in professional staff and its first floor is dedicated to Student Affairs offices The top three floors are air conditioned double occupancy sized rooms reserved for upperclassmen Newman Hall 1964 A co ed residence hall located in the President s Quad Co ed by floor and home to the WORLD and W E L L theme housing program It is named for the tenth president of Virginia Tech Walter Stephenson Newman O Shaughnessy Hall 1966 A mid sized co ed residence hall by floor it houses many upper class students Payne Hall 1993 The first residence hall at Virginia Tech to offer air conditioned rooms a co ed residence hall that offers both suite style and traditional accommodations it houses returning students and transfers only Pearson Hall East 2015 Pearson Hall is named after alumni James J and Renae Pearson Dedicated on November 20 2015 Pearson Hall replaced Rasche Hall 1957 2013 Totaling 234 dorm rooms Pearson Hall is designed to house approximately one half of the members of the Corps of Cadets 54 55 Peddrew Yates Residence Hall 1998 Home to the Residential Leadership Community RLC a suite style air conditioned residence hall Preston and Olin Building 1872 1888 The Preston and Olin building was originally constructed 1855 to house the Preston and Olin Institute The three story red brick edifice facing Main Street contained three recitation rooms a chapel and 24 lodging rooms After the founding of Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College the Preston and Olin building was used as a residence hall until 1888 After students moved into Barracks No 1 now known as Lane Hall the Preston and Olin building was remodeled and converted into the Machine Shop It was destroyed by fire in 1913 Pritchard Hall 1967 Was the second largest all male residence hall on the East Coast for over 40 years It was renovated and made co ed in the fall of 2009 and houses about 1 040 students mostly freshmen This residence hall is the largest at Virginia Tech Rasche Hall 1957 2013 In 1957 the First Academic Building 1876 was razed to construct Rasche Hall The new building also incorporated a remodeled Barracks No 2 1894 and served as a barracks for the Corps of Cadets until its demolition in 2013 56 Pearson Hall was constructed on the site in 2014 2015 Shanks Hall 1957 1990s In 1957 Science Hall also known as Barracks No 7 was razed to construct Shanks Hall Named after David Carey Shanks Jr who served as commandant of cadets from 1895 to 1898 this dorm opened in 1958 and incorporated a renovated Barracks No 4 1902 Shanks Hall housed 320 men until it was converted to house 302 women in 1970 It was converted to academic office space in the mid 1990s The building was renovated in 2001 and a small addition was made 57 Thomas Hall 1949 2017 A co ed residence hall that housed 355 students The building was formerly located in the Upper Quad across Old Turner Street from the Power Plant Thomas Hall was demolished in 2017 It was named for alumnus and Medal of Honor recipient Herbert Joseph Thomas Vawter Hall 1962 A co ed residence hall located in the President s Quad near Owens Dining Hall and Hokie Grill Vawter was an all male residence hall until 2013 when it was made co ed The building is named for Charles E Vawter who served on the board of visitors from 1886 to 1900 and was rector from 1889 to 1900 Women s Auxiliary Dormitory 1963 1966 Built in 1921 as faculty housing and originally known as the Extension Apartment House the building was remodeled 1963 for use as a women s dormitory to house 34 female students In 1966 it was converted to academic offices and used by various departments until it was destroyed by fire in 1971 The University Bookstore now occupies the site 58 Living Learning Communities Edit Virginia Tech offers 13 living learning communities for on campus students They serve as an alternative experience for their residents and communities range from entrepreneurship to community service Name Community Type Focus LocationOrion Academic Sciences New Residence Hall EastGalileo Academic Men in Engineering Hoge HallHillcrest Community Enhanced Learning Residential Honors Hillcrest HallHonors Residential College Residential College Residential Honors East Ambler JohnstonHypatia Academic Women in Engineering Hoge HallInnovate Enhanced Learning Entrepreneurship Pritchard HallMorril Enhanced Learning Sustainability Pritchard HallResidential College at West Ambler Johnston Residential College Residential Honors West Ambler JohnstonResidential Leadership Community Enhanced Learning Leadership Development Peddrew Yates HallServe Enhanced Learning Community Volunteer Service Pritchard HallThe Well Themed Housing Substance Free Newman HallThe World Themed Housing International Students Newman HallThrive Enhanced Learning Strengths Development Pritchard HallResidence Hall Federation Edit The Residence Hall Federation RHF is a University Chartered Student Organization This organization exists to serve the 9 000 on campus residents through hall councils in each residence hall The RHF is composed of 23 hall councils representing the residents of each hall and three community councils which represent two or more halls that share a common trait Each individual hall council receives a programming budget of 1 per resident or 400 if there are fewer than 400 residents from the Student Programs office and from the RHF budget The RHF Officer Group consists of 16 members composing an Executive Board and a Board of Directors Like the Resident Advisors employed by the school the Hall Councils produce programs that entertain and educate the residents of the buildings that they serve These programs range from movie nights to exam study breaks In addition the RHF officer group also puts on campus wide programs under the command of the Director of Programs Traditionally the campus wide programs have been Campus Kickoff Pizza Bonanza and Hokies Hold Em The RHF also performs a number of community service projects See also National Association of College and University Residence HallsDining halls Edit nbsp D2 Dining Hall on the second floor with Deet s Place DX and The General Store on the ground floorDietrick Dining Center Edit Dietrick Dining Center or Dietrick Hall is the largest of Virginia Tech s six dining facilities seating 1 100 and serving on average 3 758 students daily The building opened in 1970 at a cost of 2 8 million 59 The main dining area now called D2 was known as the Depot at Dietrick prior to a 6 5 million renovation completed in 2004 that converted the hall from a cafeteria style facility to one that more closely resembles a food court 60 The building also contains the Dietrick General Store an extension of the University Bookstore Deet s Place a coffee and ice cream shop and the Dietrick Express a fast food a la carte facility nbsp West End MarketWest End Market Edit West End Market opened in 1999 as Virginia Tech s second major food court dining facility Adjoined to Cochrane Hall this facility was known as Cochrane Dining Hall until it closed in 1997 for remodeling 61 West End Market was recognized in 1999 by the National Association of College and University Food Services as the best university specialty restaurant in the country and has been rated by the Princeton Review as one of the Top 3 school dining facilities multiple times achieving the 1 spot in 2006 West End Market offers students meals ranging from burgers sandwiches wraps and pizza cooked in a their own stone hearth pizza oven to fresh grilled fish steaks and lobster taken from JP s Chop House Lobster tank 62 Owens Hall Edit Owens Hall opened in 1940 as a replacement for Virginia Tech s military mess hall It was closed and completely renovated in the early 1990s The Food Court contains twelve a la carte specialty shops Owens Hall was voted by Joe Frett Weekly to have the Best Philly Cheesesteaks in the U S In 1997 a section of the building called the Hokie Grill amp Co was remodeled to feature Chick fil A and Pizza Hut franchises In its first year the Chick fil A became the top selling of all Chick fil A franchises located on college campuses 63 Other shops featured include Wǎn featuring Asian cuisine Tazon with Mexican dishes and Frank s a sandwich shop named after former football coach Frank Beamer 64 Owens Hall is located on Kent Street in the Lower Quad Turner Place Edit Opened in August 2012 Turner Place at Lavery Hall is the newest dining hall at Virginia Tech It features Atomic Pizzeria Jamba Juice 1872 Fire Grill Qdoba Mexican Grill Origami a hibachi grill Soup Garden Dolci e Caffe and Bruegger s Bagels There is also a 256 seat dining hall that is for the Corps of Cadets 65 Other dining facilities Edit Au Bon Pain located at Squires Student Center and another located in Goodwin Hall Burger 37 located at Squires Student Center DXpress located at Dietrick Hall Vet Med Cafe located in the Vet Med Commons Miscellaneous buildings Edit nbsp Burruss Hall as seen from the Drillfield nbsp The Burruss Hall TunnelBurruss Hall Edit Burruss Hall is the main administration building it also contains a 3 003 seat auditorium and houses several departments in the College of Architecture and Urban Studies It consists of the original building completed in June 1936 cost 428 404 77 080 sq ft 7 161 m2 a west wing and rear addition built in 1968 cost 1 536 899 60 503 sq ft 5 620 9 m2 and an east wing built in 1970 cost 593 729 20 638 sq ft 1 917 3 m2 The cornerstone of the original building was laid at the 1935 commencement the first commencement was held in the auditorium in June 1936 An electronic carillon costing 28 000 was added in 1958 and was dedicated at Homecoming that year It was originally known as the Teaching and Administration Building Julian Ashby Burruss 1876 1947 was President from 1919 to 1945 The first alumnus president Burruss guided VPI through tremendous increases in faculty student body and degree offerings vast growth in the physical plant and efficient changes in administrative structure He successfully pushed to admit women and shortened the military requirement to two years setting the stage for a larger civilian student body During his tenure Radford College became the Women s Division of VPI nbsp Johnston Student CenterG Burke Johnston Student Center Edit The G Burke Johnston Student Center most commonly called GBJ contains student activities rooms also used as classrooms during the day a Subway food court and study areas The Add Caldwell Lounge is located on the upper level named for Virginia Tech s first student Addison Caldwell 66 On the bottom floor of this three story building is the entrance to the Pamplin tunnel which connects this building with the adjacent Pamplin Hall there is also a bridge on the third floor connecting it to Burruss Hall nbsp Perry Street Parking DeckPerry Street Parking Deck Edit Completed in 2010 the Perry Street Parking Deck is a five level parking deck that can accommodate 1 300 vehicles Parking Services now maintains a satellite located on the first floor of the parking deck In the spring of 2012 a 1 2 million project funded through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act ARRA of 2009 installed 480 solar panels on top of the parking deck The solar panels cover an area of 16 000 square feet and are expected to generate about 136 000 kilowatt hours annually or about 13 of the total parking deck s power usage 67 Power plant Edit A campus landmark the power plant is located across Old Turner Street from the upper quad Its 180 foot 55 m chimney can be seen from many places throughout Blacksburg The plant is a cogeneration facility that provides electricity heat and steam for the campus 68 Other miscellaneous buildings Edit Alumni Hall Armory Cranwell International Center The Grove President s Residence Health and Safety Building Henderson Hall formerly the President s Residence from 1876 1902 Information Visitors Center McComas Hall 69 Media Building Moss Arts Center formerly Shultz Dining Hall Price House razed 2005 70 Smith House Solitude Squires Student Center Student Services Building University Bookstore University Club razed 2018 Wallace Annex formerly the Home Management House War Memorial Chapel War Memorial Gymnasium Wright HouseNon building campus landmarks Edit nbsp Hokie Stone on O Shaughnessy Hall nbsp The Duck PondHokie Stone Edit Main article Hokie Stone On the Blacksburg campus the majority of the buildings incorporate Hokie Stone as a building material Hokie Stone is a medley of different colored limestone often including dolomite Each block of Hokie Stone is some combination of gray brown black pink orange and maroon The limestone is mined from various quarries in Southwestern Virginia Tennessee and Alabama one of which has been operated by the university since the 1950s The Duck Pond Edit The Duck Pond is a man made water feature created in the 1930s situated along the northwest portion of the Blacksburg campus The most notable feature is a gazebo located on its south side connected to picnic and seating areas by pedestrian pathways It is adjacent to Solitude a Greek revival home built in the early 1800s the oldest structure on campus 71 Gargoyles Edit There are 14 gargoyles which appear on Tech buildings especially older buildings They appear on Smyth Hillcrest Saunders and Eggleston Halls Although some like those on the Eggleston archway are functional the majority are merely ornamental Among the more distinctive gargoyles on campus are the cowgoyles seen on some agricultural buildings 72 nbsp April 16 MemorialApril 16 Memorial Edit The April 16 Memorial is located in the center of the side of the Drillfield in front of Burruss Hall The memorial consists of 32 Hokie Stones one for each victim and a stone in the center to honor all of the fallen and injured victims On the night of April 16 2007 students placed pieces of Hokie Stone in a semi circle at the base of the reviewing stand overlooking the Drillfield and this then led to the creation of the present day memorial 73 See also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Virginia Tech campus Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Virginia Tech shooting Zhu HaiyangReferences Edit The Brand Guide Virginia Tech Identity Standards and Style Guide PDF Virginia Tech May 2013 p 45 Retrieved September 11 2015 The burnt orange and Chicago maroon are the university s official colors that were adopted in 1896 Virginia Tech Campus Map Campus Maps 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 11 23 Retrieved November 23 2014 Factbook About the University Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 05 27 Retrieved May 31 2014 Extended Campus Locations Maps amp Locations Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 05 27 Retrieved May 31 2014 Extended Campuses Virginia Tech Graduate School 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 05 29 Retrieved May 31 2014 Center for European Studies and Architecture at Virginia Tech Archived from the original on May 27 2014 Retrieved May 31 2014 Agnew Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved May 31 2014 Bishop Favrao Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved May 31 2014 Burchard Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Retrieved May 31 2014 Burruss Hall Cowgill Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved May 31 2014 Chadwick Heather Riley May 2 2006 Cowgill Hall wins Virginia Society of the American Institute of Architects award Virginia Tech News Archived from the original on 2009 03 20 Retrieved May 31 2014 Lent Andrew Virginia Tech s Cowgill Hall receives architectural award Roanoke Times Archived from the original on 2012 03 20 Retrieved June 4 2006 Davidson Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on January 22 2014 Retrieved May 31 2014 Renovate Davidson Hall University Design amp Construction 2014 Archived from the original on May 31 2014 Retrieved May 31 2014 Derring Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved May 31 2014 Engineering Facility Building Number 126 Capital Design and Construction Dept Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University August 1997 Archived from the original on 2000 07 08 Durham Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on January 22 2014 Retrieved May 31 2014 a b Main Campus Map PDF Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 04 03 Retrieved May 31 2014 Hincker Larry June 5 2007 Norris Hall to begin phased reoccupation Virginia Tech News Archived from the original on 2013 11 05 Retrieved May 31 2014 Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Archived from the original on 2007 04 25 College of Engineering Dean s Office Virginia Tech College of Engineering 2006 Archived from the original on 2007 02 14 Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics Latest News from the ESM Department College of Engineering Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University May 22 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 05 31 Retrieved May 31 2014 Norris Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved May 31 2014 Virginia Tech will reopen Norris Hall CNN com Associated Press June 6 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 06 11 Vargas Theresa December 21 2007 Va Tech s Norris Hall To House Peace Center The Washington Post Retrieved May 31 2014 Owczarski Mark March 31 2009 Norris Hall second floor to re open April 10 Virginia Tech News Archived from the original on 2014 05 31 Retrieved May 31 2014 Puri Ishwar August 31 2007 Virginia Tech Instructor Ready to Move Forward Morning Edition Interview Interviewed by Inskeep Steve npr Archived from the original on 2013 09 26 Retrieved May 31 2014 Puri Ishwar April 20 2009 Norris Hall opening Remarks by Ishwar Puri University Relations Video Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Archived from the original QuickTime on April 16 2010 Military Building About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 03 15 Retrieved June 2 2014 Spieldenner Bob January 27 2015 Lane Hall receives national historical status www vtnews vt edu Virginia Tech Retrieved March 7 2016 About Joseph F Ware Jr College of Engineering Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Archived from the original on 2013 07 02 Retrieved June 1 2014 Klages Machine Shop Joseph F Ware Jr Advanced Engineering Lab Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2011 14 Archived from the original on 2013 07 02 Retrieved June 2 2014 Virginia Tech Buildings www vt edu Virginia Tech 2016 Retrieved March 7 2016 Art and Design Learning Center About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved June 2 2014 Cheatham Hall About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved June 2 2014 Dairy Science Complex About Buildings Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 01 22 Retrieved June 2 2014 Goodwin Hall www vt edu Virginia Tech 2014 Retrieved March 3 2016 Hokies defense scores twice ESPN College Football Recap November 1 2003 Archived from the original on 2013 10 23 Retrieved June 2 2014 Lavender David August 21 2005 No place like home rivals com Yahoo Sports Archived from the original on 2014 06 02 Retrieved June 2 2014 Athletic Facilities www hokiesports com Virginia Tech Retrieved March 7 2016 Hoge Hall Nutter David November 20 1997 Panel reports to Torgersen on Claudius Lee Virginia Tech Digital Library and Archives Spectrum Archived from the original on June 1 2014 Retrieved June 3 2014 Board of Visitors Executive Committee approves new names for residence halls news vt edu Retrieved 3 October 2023 Virginia Tech Student s Suicide dailypress com November 29 2007 dead link Va Tech Student Dies in 8 Story Fall The Washington Post HighBeam Research web archive org 16 July 2018 Retrieved 3 October 2023 Board of Visitors extends contract of Tim Sands sets university budget at 1 6 billion for 2018 19 fiscal year Amir Vera and Rebekah Riess 15 August 2020 Virginia Tech renames dorms once named after men with racist views CNN Retrieved 2020 08 18 Whitehurst Hall vt edu Retrieved 2020 08 18 Whitehurst left a legacy of firsts for Black students Spieldenner Bob June 8 2015 Brodie Hall demolition begins this week www vtnews vt edu Virginia Tech Retrieved March 3 2016 Killer decapitates Va Tech student police say CNN com www cnn com Retrieved 2023 01 29 BUILDINGS Major Williams Hall www vt edu Virginia Tech Retrieved March 2 2016 Raboteau Albert Jordy III November 11 2015 Virginia Tech News Virginia Tech s Pearson Hall to open this week www vtnews vt edu Virginia Tech Retrieved March 2 2016 Raboteau Albert Jordy III April 22 2015 New Corps of Cadets residence hall named in honor of J and Renae Pearson www vtnews vt edu Virginia Tech Retrieved March 4 2016 Cox Clara B Rasche Hall A plain monument to a colorful character www vtmag vt edher Retrieved March 2 2016 permanent dead link Shanks Hall vt edu Retrieved 3 October 2023 Campus Buildings history unirel vt edu Retrieved 3 October 2023 Student Programs Virginia Tech Virtual Tour Archived from the original on 2006 05 09 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Student Programs Virginia Tech Virtual Tour Archived from the original on 2006 08 29 Retrieved 2006 06 04 Student Programs Virginia Tech Virtual Tour Archived from the original on 2006 05 24 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Virginia Tech Magazine Feature 2 Archived from the original on 2006 08 28 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Student Programs Virginia Tech Virtual Tour Archived from the original on 2006 05 09 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Owens Food Court at Owens Hall dining vt edu Retrieved 2022 01 07 Turner Place at Lavery Hall Your Residence Hall Dining Services DSA Virginia Tech Archived from the original on 2012 11 05 Retrieved 2012 10 08 First Student History of Virginia Tech www unirel vt edu Retrieved 2018 03 22 Installation under way for university s first major solar panel system news vt edu Retrieved 3 October 2023 Utilities Virginia Tech Archived from the original on 2006 10 16 Retrieved 2006 10 03 McComas Hall www vt edu March 7 2016 2016 Relocation Plans Virginia Tech Women s Center 2004 09 11 Archived from the original on 2004 09 11 Retrieved 2007 04 05 Adams Mason Fall 2014 Virginia Tech Magazine Waterways Inside the Duck Pond www vtmag vt edu Volume 37 Number 1 Retrieved March 7 2016 94vtmp pdf PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2008 02 16 Retrieved 2007 07 20 April 16 Memorial weremember vt edu Retrieved 3 October 2023 External links EditVirginia Tech Student Programs Virginia Tech campus construction status Virginia Tech maps Official VT buildings page Virginia Tech Residence Hall Federation Link to the April 16 2007 school shooting Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Campus of Virginia Tech amp oldid 1179546263 Burruss Hall, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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