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Cathedral of Learning

The Cathedral of Learning is a 42-story skyscraper that serves as the centerpiece of the University of Pittsburgh's (Pitt) main campus in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Standing at 535 feet (163 m),[6] the 42-story Late Gothic Revival Cathedral is the tallest educational building in the Western Hemisphere and the second-tallest university building (fifth-tallest educationally-purposed building) in the world, after the main building of Moscow State University.[7] It is also the second-tallest gothic-styled building in the world, after the Woolworth Building in Manhattan.[8] The Cathedral of Learning was commissioned in 1921 and ground was broken in 1926 under general contractor Stone & Webster.[9] The first class was held in the building in 1931 and its exterior finished in October 1934,[10] prior to its formal dedication in June 1937. It is a Pittsburgh landmark[2][11] listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[12][13]

Cathedral of Learning
The Cathedral of Learning at the University of Pittsburgh
LocationPittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Coordinates40°26′39″N 79°57′11″W / 40.44417°N 79.95306°W / 40.44417; -79.95306
Built1926; 98 years ago (1926)
ArchitectCharles Klauder
Architectural styleLate Gothic Revival with some Art Deco influences
Part ofSchenley Farms Historic District (ID83002213)
NRHP reference No.75001608[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPNovember 3, 1975[1]
Designated CPJuly 22, 1983[1]
Designated CPHSFebruary 22, 1977[2]
Designated PHLF1970: Croghan-Schenley Ballroom[3]
1972: Cathedral of Learning interiors[4]
1973: Cathedral of Learning[5]

Colloquially referred to as "Cathy" by Pitt students,[14][15] the Cathedral of Learning is a steel-frame structure overlaid with Indiana limestone and contains more than 2,000 rooms and windows. It functions as a primary classroom and administrative center of the university, and is home to the Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences, the School of Social Work, and many of its departments, as well as the University Honors College. It houses many specialty spaces, including a studio theater, food court, study lounges, offices, computer and language labs, 31 Nationality Rooms, and a half-acre (2000 m2, 22,000 ft2), 4-story-high, vaulted, gothic study and event hall. The building contains noted examples of stained glass, stone, wood, and iron work and is often used by the university in photographs, postcards, and other advertisements.

Use edit

 
The Cathedral of Learning

The basement and floors up to (and including) floor 40 are used for educational purposes, although most floors above 36 house the building's mechanical equipment. These floors include theaters, computer laboratories, language laboratories, classrooms, and departmental offices. The basement contains a black box theater and the ground floor contains computer labs, language labs, classrooms, and the Cathedral Café food court.[16][17] The lobby, comprising the first through third floors, contains a massive gothic Commons Room that is used as a general study area and for special events and is ringed by three floors of classrooms, including, on the first and third floors, the 31 Nationality Rooms designed by members of Pittsburgh's ethnic communities in the styles of different nations and ethnic groups. Twenty-nine of these serve as functional classrooms while more conventional classrooms are located on the second floor and elsewhere throughout the building. The first floor also serves as home to the offices of the Chancellor, Executive Vice Chancellor, and other administration offices, as well as the Nationality Rooms Gift Shop. The fourth floor, which was previously home to the main stacks of the university's library and the McCarl Center for Nontraditional Student Success,[18] now houses a mix of interdisciplinary studies programs. The fifth floor originally housed the main borrowing, reference, and reading rooms of the university library, and now houses the Department of English. The Pitt Humanities Center is housed on the sixth floor. The University Honors College is located on the 35th and 36th floors.

The Cathedral of Learning houses the Department of Philosophy,[19] as of 2009 considered one of the top five in the United States,[20] and the Department of History and Philosophy of Science,[21] consistently ranked at the top of the field.[22][23][24] Other departments in the Cathedral include English, Religious Studies, Theatre Arts, and the School of Social Work which maintains the highest classrooms in the building located on the 23rd floor.[25][note 1] Floors 38–40 are closed to the general public, as they contain electrical wiring for the building, as well as the Babcock Room, a large conference room on the 40th floor used for meetings, seminars, and special events and which provides a panoramic view of downtown Pittsburgh and the rest of the university. The 40th floor balcony also houses a nesting pair of Peregrine falcons. A view from the top is available via a webcam.[26] Golden lights, dubbed "victory lights," surround the outside of the highest floors and are lit following Pitt football wins and other notable victories, giving the upper part of the cathedral an amber glow.[27]

The top of the building serves as the site for the transmitter of the student-run radio station WPTS-FM[28] as well as the amateur radio repeater W3YJ which is run by the Panther Amateur Radio club on a frequency of 443.45 MHz.[29][30]

Cathedral of Learning Use and Notable Spaces by Floor
Floor Use
Subbasement Tunnel to Stephen Foster Memorial
Basement Rauh Studio Theatre
Ground Cathedral Café, Computer labs,
language labs, lecture halls, Testing Center
1 Commons Room, Nationality Rooms,
Crogan-Schenley Ballroom,
Nationality Rooms Gift Shop,
Offices of University Chancellor and Vice Chancellor
2 Commons Room, class and lecture rooms, Mulert Memorial Room
3 Commons Room, Nationality Rooms,
Frick Auditorium, class and lecture rooms
4 Cultural Studies, Film Studies, and GSWS program
5 English Department, English Commons Room
6 Humanities Center
7 Office of the Chief Information Officer,
IBM 360 display
8 Office of the Provost
Floor Use
9 Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences main offices
10 Department of Philosophy
11 Center for Philosophy of Science
12 Slavic languages, Braun Room,
Nationality Room and Intercultural Exchange Program office
13 Departments of Hispanic, French, and Italian languages
14 Department of Communication and
William Pitt Debating Union
15 German Language, Classics
16 Department of Theater Arts
17 CFO Institutional Research office
18 Office of the Chief Financial Officer
19 Financial Information Systems
20 Center on Race and Social Problems
21 School of Social Work
22 School of Social Work offices
23 School of Social Work classrooms
Floor Use
24 Office of University Counsel
25 Office of University Counsel, Cyber Institute of Law and Politics
26 Department of Religious Studies
27 Department of Asian Studies
28 Department of Linguistics
29 ROTC
30 Payment Processing and Financial Records
31 Financial Information Administration, Accounting Research
32 IT Business Solutions
33 Purchasing Services and Supplier Management
34 Purchasing Services
35 Honors College
36 Honors College
37 Honors College
38 Mechanical
39 Mechanical
40 Babcock Room
Refs:[31]

History edit

In 1921, John Gabbert Bowman became the tenth chancellor of the university. At that time, the school consisted of a series of buildings constructed along Henry Hornbostel's plan for the campus and included "temporary" wooden structures built during World War I. He then began to envision a "tall building", that would be later termed the Cathedral of Learning, to provide a dramatic symbol of education for the city and alleviate overcrowding by adding much needed space in order to meet present and future needs of the university.

His reasoning is summarized in this quote:

The building was to be more than a schoolhouse; it was to be a symbol of the life that Pittsburgh through the years had wanted to live. It was to make visible something of the spirit that was in the hearts of pioneers as, long ago, they sat in their log cabins and thought by candlelight of the great city that would sometime spread out beyond their three rivers and that even they were starting to build.

Bowman looked at a 14-acre (5.7 ha) plot of land named Frick Acres. On November 26, 1921, with aid from the Mellon family, the university was given the $2.5 million plot, and began plans for a proper university building on the site.[32]

One of the foremost Gothic architects of the time, Philadelphian Charles Klauder, was hired to design the tower. The design took two years to finish, with the final plan attempting to fuse the idea of a modern skyscraper with the tradition and ideals of Gothic architecture. The plans received strong resistance from the community and from some university officials, who felt it was too tall for the city.

 
Fountain outside of the Cathedral

Local legend states that to counteract this resistance, Bowman ordered that the construction of the walls would start at the top floor and work its way down, so the project could not be canceled. This has been traced to an account on November 21, 1943, issue of At Ease, a tabloid related to local military personnel on campus, which stated that "the masonry was started from the top downward." Construction photographs show that this was not the case, and that some stonework was done on the first floor before any other stonework was begun. One engineer with the company working on the Cathedral[who?] explained that the exterior walls of the cathedral are not load-bearing. Because of this, many similar buildings would start construction at the third or fourth floors. Practically, this makes sense, as it allows easy movement of building materials and equipment into and out of the building. Instead, in the cathedral's case, the issue was one of the stone that would be used in lower stories. In fact, the quarry was not prepared to deliver the stone on schedule, so construction was delayed, and work began on the higher stories.

... in the literal sense of the word, Late Gothic Revival architecture culminated in the University of Pittsburgh's skyscraping Cathedral of Learning.

Marcus Whiffen, architecture historian[33]

When construction started on the Cathedral of Learning in 1926, it was the tallest building in Pittsburgh, although the Gulf Tower (1932) was completed and surpassed it by the time the Cathedral of Learning was officially dedicated in June 1937. Today, it remains the tallest educational building in the Western hemisphere, the second tallest university building in the world behind the 36 story, 240 m (including a 57 m spire) Moscow State University main building completed in 1953,[7] and the fourth tallest educational building in the world behind the Moscow State University and Mode Gakuen Cocoon (204 m)[34] and Spiral Towers (170 m),[35] both completed in 2008 and located in Japan.

World War II edit

On July 26, 1940, as World War II was starting, a bomb threat was made against the structure with extra guards being posted to secure it and the authorities not ruling out possible wartime sabotage.[36]

During the war effort, the cathedral was assigned to house, feed and instruct roughly 1,000 of the Army Air Corps (forerunner of today's U.S. Air Force) as well as dozens of Army engineers. The building had at least 12 floors dedicated for military use from 1943 until 1945.[37]

Funding edit

Fundraising for this project came in many forms, including donations from industries, corporations, individuals and foreign governments. To raise public views of the cathedral, and at the same time finance the construction, Bowman started a fundraising campaign in 1925.

An important part of this campaign was a project reaching out to the children of the city entitled "Buy a Brick for Pitt". Each schoolchild sent a dime ($0.10) and a letter to the university, explaining how they earned the dime for the building. In exchange, the child received a certificate for one brick contained in the cathedral. A total of 97,000 certificates were issued to children.

Commons Room edit

 
Commons Room

The main part of the cathedral's first floor is the Commons Room, called one of the "great architectural fantasies of the twentieth century", is a fifteenth-century English perpendicular Gothic-style hall that covers half an acre (2,000 m2) and extends upward four stories, reaching 52 feet (16 m) tall.[38] The room was a gift of Andrew Mellon. It is a piece of true Gothic architecture; no steel supports were used in the construction of its arches. Each arch is a true arch, and they support their own weight. Each base for the arches weighs five tons, and it is said that they are so firmly placed that each could hold a large truck. The large central piers act only as screens for the structural steel that holds up the upper floors of the building.

Despite its heavy use, the Commons Room is kept quiet by the use of Guastavino acoustical tiles as the stones between the ribs of vaulting.[38] This feature was insisted upon by Chancellor Bowman. The architect, Klauder, objected due to the increased costs of this construction method. Bowman responded with the comment: "You cannot build a great University with fraud in it."[39]

Klauder considered the Commons Room to be his greatest achievement.[39]

Joseph Gattoni designed the stonework, much of which depicts western Pennsylvanian plant life. The walls are made of Indiana limestone and the floor is green Vermont slate.

The wrought iron in the room, including the large gates leading to the elevators, was a gift from George Hubbard Clapp and was designed by the ironworker Samuel Yellin. Over the gates are two lines by Robert Bridges, from an untitled poem:

Here is eternal spring; for you the very stars of heaven are new.[40]

Also located in the corridors surrounding the Commons Room are plaques featuring calligraphy designed and hand-cut in slate by Edward Catich, including one featuring a poem by Lawrence Lee titled "The Cathedral,"[41] as well as stained glass windows by Charles Connick.[42]

Nationality Rooms edit

 
The Austrian Classroom, one of 31 Nationality Rooms in the Cathedral of Learning
 
The Chinese Classroom

The cathedral is home to 31 Nationality Rooms located on the first and third floors: 29 working classrooms and two rooms used mostly for display or occasional special events. Each nationality room is designed to celebrate a different culture that had an influence on Pittsburgh's growth, depicting an era prior to (or in the singular case of the French Classroom, just after) 1787, the year of the university's founding and of the signing of the U.S. Constitution.

The Nationality Room programs began in 1926 when Bowman decided that he wanted to involve the community as much as he could in constructing the cathedral, so he proposed that each nationality that had a significant number of people in Pittsburgh would be allowed to design their nationality's room for the cathedral. Each group had to form a Room Committee responsible for all fundraising, designing, and acquisition. The university provided only the room and, upon completion, upkeep for perpetuity. All other materials, labor, and design were provided by the individual committees. These were sometimes aided by foreign governments and the rooms contain many authentic artifacts and materials from the country represented.[43] A typical room on the 1st floor (those built between 1938 and 1957) took between three and ten years to complete and cost the equivalent of US$300,000 in 2006 dollars. More recent rooms have cost in the range of $750,000 and up.[44]

Classrooms edit

Proposed rooms edit

There are six nationality rooms in various stages of planning to add to the current 31.[45]

 

Other notable spaces edit

 
Dedication panel of the Babcock Memorial Room

There are several other notable facilities and rooms within the Cathedral of Learning. In addition, these spaces do not fall under the auspices of the Nationality Rooms program.

Babcock Room edit

The Edward V. Babcock Memorial Room is a plush, carpeted, wood-paneled conference room constructed on the 40th floor for use as the university trustees' boardroom. Funded by a Babcock family grant of $327,000 ($3.32 million in 2022 dollars[52]) and dedicated in November 1958,[44] all of the room's features are original, except for the lighting, furniture and carpeting.[53] The room's square shape is modified by four alcoves, in one of which is a portrait of Babcock by Malcolm Stevens Parcell. The walls, featuring intricate geometric patterns, are paneled in Appalachian white oak with burled walnut inlays and touches of rosewood.[54] The windows, adorned by leaf-patterned curtains, boast a spectacular panoramic view of the surrounding area.[53][55] The room is also adjoined by a kitchen.[56] Access to the room is limited to a spiral staircase and an elevator, both requiring a key, that originate on the 36th floor.[56] During the early 1970s at the height of student activism, a group of protesting students attempted to barricade the room during a trustees meeting.[44][57] Today, the trustees have outgrown the room and generally meet in the Assembly Room of the William Pitt Union. The Babcock room now serves as a seminar and meeting room and is also used for special events.[53] A pair of peregrine falcons nests on the balcony outside the room.[58]

Braun Room edit

 
The Braun Room in the Cathedral of Learning

Following the opening of the Cathedral of Learning, the offices of the Dean of Women moved to the 12th floor of the Cathedral in 1938. The interior was unfinished but Dean Thyrsa Amos envisioned a dignified and beautiful space for women to meet.

When Dean Amos died in 1941, the new quarters were still unfinished. The Alumnae Association created the Thyrsa W. Amos Fund to plaster the walls and to furnish Room 1217 in her name. Room 1217 was never finished, but after World War II the other rooms on the twelfth floor were completed including room 1201, now known as the Braun Room. Mrs. A. E. Braun donated the furnishings and floral carved mahogany wood paneling which she had purchased in 1941 from the library of the home of Grant McCargo in the East End of Pittsburgh. The Braun Room was dedicated in 1946 and serves, along with its furniture, as an example of a modern reproduction of Louis XV design. Original blue carpeting was replaced in 1955 with a Persian rug, named "The Iron Rug of Persia", that was donated by the daughter and son-in-law of A. E. Braun. Restored in 2015, the rug was made for a regional Khan in the northern part of Iran around 1810.[59] Other features of the room include a low bookcase, bordered and topped with classic carving, that was crafted by university carpenters to replace the original fireplace whose inclusion was impractical on the 12th floor, along with two crystal drop chandeliers.[60]

Dean Helen Pool Rush and her successor, Dean Savina Skewis, carried on the traditions of Dean Amos until the Dean of Women's Office was closed in 1969, and its functions and quarters were assumed by other departments.[61] The Braun Room is used for meetings and study abroad scholarship selection panels.

Croghan-Schenley Ballroom edit

 
Croghan-Schenley Ballroom in the Cathedral of Learning

The Croghan-Schenley room, situated on the first floor of the Cathedral in room 156, is actually two adjoining Greek Revival rooms, the Ballroom and the Oval Room, connected by a hidden passageway in the Ballroom's fireplace. The rooms were originally part of William Croghan Jr.'s mansion, known as the Picnic House, built in 1830 in the Stanton Heights area of Pittsburgh. The rooms themselves were created in 1835 by the Philadelphia carver Mordecai Van Horn, and they have been regarded as being among the most lavish examples of Greek Revival designs in America.[38]

His daughter, Mary Elizabeth, went to boarding school in New York, but in 1842 at the age of fifteen she eloped with 43-year-old Edward Wyndham Harrington Schenley, a captain in the British military. The elopement caused a family schism. Mary would not visit often, and in an effort to convince her to move back to Pittsburgh, the new rooms were commissioned. Following the death of William Croghan in 1850, the mansion was run by caretakers with no permanent residents for some 60 years. William S. Miller, then president of Steelwood Corp., purchased the Croghan mansion following World War II and it was soon leveled for a new housing development, but the Croghan-Schenley rooms were spared.[62]

In 1955, the rooms, donated by Miller, were dismantled and rebuilt in the cathedral, except that the original ceilings had to be lowered about 8 inches to accommodate the available space.

In 1982, the rooms were refurbished to their 19th century glory. Highlighting the ballroom are the hand-cut glass chandelier and four wooden, hand-carved Greek columns, surviving examples of western Pennsylvania's Greek classical revival period popular with those of means in the 1830s.

The Croghan-Schenley rooms are the last extant vestiges of the estate of Mary Schenley, who before she died gave much of her holdings and property to the city of Pittsburgh—including Schenley farms, where the Cathedral sits, and Schenley Park.[63]

 
The Frick Auditorium

Stories tell of a ghost, speculated to be that of Mary Schenley, that is said to roam the Ballroom and Nationality Rooms. The doors to the rooms are locked every night, but furniture is sometimes said to be found rearranged by daylight staff. The swinging of the chandelier has been said to indicate her presence.[64][65][66]

Frick Auditorium edit

The Frick Auditorium is a lecture hall in room 324 of the Cathedral of Learning. Originally conceptualized as the Fine Arts Lecture Room intended to complement the Fine Arts Department then located on the seventh floor,[67] the room was completed in 1939[68] and features stone mullions, chambranle, and other trim as well as wooden lecture seating and a coffered ceiling. A centerpiece element in the room is a Nicholas Lochoff reproduction of The Resurrection by Piero della Francesca that was purchased for the lecture hall by Helen Clay Frick. Frick would later donate a large collection of Lochoff reproductions to the university which are on display in the Nicholas Lochoff Cloister in the university's Frick Fine Arts Building.[69]

Humanities Center edit

 
Entrance to the Humanities Center

The University of Pittsburgh's Humanities Center, part of School of Arts and Sciences, is housed in the Cathedral of Learning's room 602, which was a sixth-floor space once occupied by the Darlington Memorial Library. Following digitization and protective storage of the library's materials, its space was renovated in 2009 by architect Rob Pfaffmann to house the center, which now includes office space for staff and visiting fellows.[70] The Humanities Center space retains much of the original character and many of the antique furnishings originally bequeathed to the university by the Darlington family, and features moldings and green walls that are duplicated from the 18th mansion Graeme Park, a Pennsylvania colonial-era governor's residence.[71] The Center for Humanities was finished in time for an open house that was part a conference hosted by the center on November 14–15, 2009.[72]

 
Humanities Center

The space served as the home of The Darlington Memorial Library from 1936 until its recent conversion to the Humanities Center.[73] The library was entered through a memorial vestibule and consisted of a central room with eight alcoves. Among other notable furnishings, it contained a wrought iron entrance gate by Samuel Yellin.[71] The library was given to the University of Pittsburgh by the daughters of William McCullough Darlington and Mary Carson Darlington. The initial gift of eleven thousand volumes was made in 1918 by Mary O'Hara Darlington and Edith Darlington Ammon. This was followed by Mary O'Hara Darlington's bequest in 1925 of the remainder of the family's library and much of the family estate. The Darlington family's tremendous interest in historical research was the force behind creating what was said to be the largest private library west of the Alleghenies. The library collection is particularly rich in material about the French and Indian War and the history of Western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Valley, as both William and Mary Darlington researched and published in these areas. While the collection's main focus is on American history and literature, other collection highlights include rare maps and atlases, works on ornithology and natural history, and early travel narratives. The Darlington's son, O'Hara Darlington, also amassed collections of Victorian literature sporting books and works of illustrators and caricaturists. The collection also has been enriched over the years by donations from other individuals and organizations, which especially have enhanced its content about the history of the Western Pennsylvania region.[74]

Before renovation of the original library space, its materials were digitized and placed online at The Darlington Digital Library.[75] The original, sometimes fragile, materials of the library were placed in storage for availability to researchers upon request.[76] A virtual tour of the Darlington Memorial Library as it previously existed in the Cathedral of Learning is available at the main entrance[77] and the main room.[78]

Cultural Studies, Film Studies, and GSWS program space edit

 
Former McCarl Center

Located on the fourth floor of the Cathedral of Learning, the current home of both the Cultural Studies, Film Studies, and Gender, Sexuality, & Women's Studies (GSWS) programs,[79] was the prior home of the McCarl Center for Nontraditional Student Success until it moved to Wesley W. Posvar Hall in 2014.[80] The space occupies what once housed two levels of the main stacks of the university's library.[81] The 2,500-square-foot (230 m2) space was previously opened as the $537,000 McCarl Center in 2002.[82] Made possible by a gift from F. James and Foster J.J. McCarl,[82] it was designed by Alan J. Cuteri and his architectural firm Strada, LLC, and includes wood finishes, double-height spaces with high ceilings and windows, a main corridor conceived as an interior street, and many elements that refer to the Cathedral of Learning's Gothic architecture including decorative painted metal columns with contemporary buttress-style arches.[18] Today the space includes a resource library, offices, and seminar room, and class room that are used by the Cultural Studies and GSWS programs.[79] Students in gender studies classes have access to the gender studies library, which houses classic and recent books on gender/sexuality, and to two gender studies classrooms. The GSWS faculty offices are also nearby. Also hanging in a hallway on the fourth floor outside the space, three unsigned and undated 7-by-3-foot (2.1 by 0.9 m) glass-encased murals that depict Renaissance painting styles and which have long belonged to the university but are of unknown origin.[83]

Mulert Memorial Room edit

 
Mulert Memorial Room

Located in room 204, the walnut-paneled Mulert Memorial classroom was designed by Philadelphia architect Gustav Ketterer and university architect Albert Klimcheck.[84] The room features wood floors, fluted ionic columns, red velvet draperies, and student chairs with leather seats.[85] The room's doors have fluted jams and panelings of Greek rosettes. A Mulert family coat-of-arms and memorial inscription is located on the rear wall of the room.[86] The room was provided for in the will of the late Mt. Lebanon resident Justus Mulert, the room was dedicated on December 21, 1942, and serves as a memorial to Mulert's wife, Louise and his son Ferdinand Max, who died in 1912 during his senior year at Washington and Jefferson College.[87]

Richard E. Rauh Studio Theatre edit

 
Studio Theatre

The Richard E. Rauh Studio Theatre, a facility utilized by the Department of Theatre Arts, is located in the basement of the cathedral. The Rauh Studio Theatre is a black box space that can be configured for almost any set requirements. It is home to student-directed laboratory productions, play readings, Dark Night Cabaret, and played host to Pittsburgh's longest-running theatre show, Friday Nite Improvs, started in 1989 by graduate theatre students.[88] In 2017 the Studio Theatre was named in honor of Pitt alumnus Richard E. Raugh who donated $1 million to support it and the university's theater productions.[89]

University Honors College edit

The University Honors College, dedicated in 1986, is housed in a 2002-2003 renovated space on the 35th and 36th floors of the cathedral. The Honors College provides support and enriched opportunities for scholarship among the university's undergraduates and offers a Bachelor of Philosophy (BPhil) degree.[90]

The 2002-2003 renovation, by Rothschild Doyno Collaborative of Pittsburgh's Strip District, showcased an existing two-story arched window that is visible at night for miles around. The four-leaf medieval quatrefoil medallion at the top of the cathedral is a central motif in the design of the Honors College. Stained glass behind the reception desk at the center of the space was designed by Glenn Greene Glass of Regent Square and centers on a design representing the four seasons, done in polished agate. Wrought ironwork was produced by Vic Reynaud of Technique Manufacturing in the spirit of Samuel Yellin who did the Commons Room ironwork.[91]

Recent proposed changes to the Cathedral edit

 
University Honors College on the 35th and 36th floor

In the early 2000s, there was some controversy over whether university funds should be used to illuminate the Cathedral at night, or to clean the building's façade. The cleaning was abandoned because it was too costly. Some Oakland residents spoke out against the cleaning, stating that the years of soot should stay as an homage to Pittsburgh's industrial past. However, the university approved nearly $5 million for cleaning and restoration of stonework on February 28, 2007. The work was completed at the end of 2007, restoring the exterior of the building to its original condition.

In the wake of the September 11 attacks, the cathedral was deemed "at risk" because no obstacles were in place to prevent a vehicle from driving into the entrances of the building. To address this concern, the university installed bollards that rise out of the sidewalk.[92]

As of 2001, around 200 window air conditioners operated in the building. During the 2000s, the university focused upon providing air-conditioning to the first four floors, which contain many classrooms. The plan called for the complete central cooling of the entire Cathedral of Learning by the end of the decade.[93]

In 2014 the Property and Facilities Committee approved a plan for a $10.4 million upgrade of the building's elevator system.[94] This is the second major upgrade of the elevators implemented in the building's history. Originally manually controlled and later automated to Westinghouse Selectomatic in 1971, the system was completely modernized into Otis Compass+ destination dispatch in 2016.

References in popular culture and student life edit

 
The Cathedral of Learning lit up during the fall of 2008 for the Pittsburgh Festival of Light in celebration of the city of Pittsburgh's 250th anniversary. The mosaic, created by French artist Lucette de Rugy, was inspired by Gutenberg's 15th-century printing press
 
One A Day: 365 Views of the Cathedral of Learning, painted by Felix de la Concha, a permanent exhibit at the University of Pittsburgh's Alumni Hall

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although there are no classrooms higher than the 23rd floor, classes occasionally meet in rooms on higher floors, either temporarily (e.g., if a normal classroom is temporarily unavailable) or by consensus of the students and instructor if a class is small enough to meet in a professor's personal office or a student lounge.

References edit

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  3. ^ "Historic Landmark Plaques 1968-2009" (PDF). Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. 2010: 3. Retrieved June 25, 2010. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. ^ "Historic Landmark Plaques 1968-2009" (PDF). Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. 2010: 5. Retrieved June 25, 2010. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  5. ^ "Historic Landmark Plaques 1968-2009" (PDF). Pittsburgh, PA: Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation. 2010: 6. Retrieved June 25, 2010. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  6. ^ Emporis. Archived from the original on August 20, 2004. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  7. ^ a b . Emporis. Archived from the original on April 6, 2004. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
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  9. ^ "C. A. Stone Is Dead" (PDF). DailNew York Times Obituaries, page 21. February 26, 1941. Retrieved July 9, 2019.
  10. ^ Alberts, Robert C. (1986). Pitt: The Story of the University of Pittsburgh, 1787-1987. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-8229-1150-0. Retrieved November 10, 2009.
  11. ^ . January 27, 2007. Archived from the original on January 27, 2007. Retrieved February 25, 2008.
  12. ^ "National Register of Historical Places - PENNSYLVANIA (PA), Allegheny County". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  13. ^ "National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form: Cathedral of Learning" (PDF). 1967. Retrieved June 8, 2010.
  14. ^ Iacullo, Jessica (April 15, 2014). "YouTube sensations perform at Bigelow Bash". The Pitt News. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  15. ^ Schackner, Bill (March 4, 2016). "Pitt's "Cathy" gets people chatty about nickname". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Pittsburgh, PA. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
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  20. ^ Leitner, Brian (2009). "The Philosophical Gourmet Report 2009: Overall Rankings". The Philosophical Gourmet Report: Brian Leiter's Ranking of Graduate Programs in Philosophy in the English-Speaking World. Blackwell. Archived from the original on August 13, 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
  21. ^ "Department of History and Philosophy of Science". University of Pittsburgh. July 10, 2010. Retrieved August 2, 2010.
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Further reading edit

  • Alberts, Robert C. (1986). Pitt: the story of the University of Pittsburgh, 1787-1987. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0-8229-1150-0.
  • Bowman, John G. (1963). Unofficial notes.
  • Brown, Mark McCullough (1987). The Cathedral of Learning: concept, design, construction. University Art Gallery, Henry Clay Frick Fine Arts Building, University of Pittsburgh.
  • Starrett, Agnes Lynch (1938). The Darlington Memorial Library: University of Pittsburgh. University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Nationality Rooms Guide Training Material

External links edit

  • Cathedral of Learning Virtual Tour
  • History of the Cathedral of Learning
  • Nationality Rooms homepage

Panoramas

  • 180° panorama Gigapan of the Commons Room
  • Gigapan of the Cathedral's Commons Room
  • Gigapan of the Austrian Nationality Room
  • Gigapan from the 36th floor of the Cathedral
  • Gigapan of a somewhat squished front of the Cathedral of Learning

Video

  • Cathedral of Learning feature on John Ratzenberger's Made in America
  • Post-Gazette.com: The Cathedral of Learning's Peregrine falcon chicks
Preceded by University of Pittsburgh Buildings
Cathedral of Learning

Constructed: 1926-1937
Succeeded by
Preceded by Pittsburgh Skyscrapers by Height
535 feet (163 m)
42 floors
Succeeded by
Preceded by Pittsburgh Skyscrapers by Year of Completion
1936
Succeeded by

cathedral, learning, story, skyscraper, that, serves, centerpiece, university, pittsburgh, pitt, main, campus, oakland, neighborhood, pittsburgh, pennsylvania, standing, feet, story, late, gothic, revival, cathedral, tallest, educational, building, western, he. The Cathedral of Learning is a 42 story skyscraper that serves as the centerpiece of the University of Pittsburgh s Pitt main campus in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Standing at 535 feet 163 m 6 the 42 story Late Gothic Revival Cathedral is the tallest educational building in the Western Hemisphere and the second tallest university building fifth tallest educationally purposed building in the world after the main building of Moscow State University 7 It is also the second tallest gothic styled building in the world after the Woolworth Building in Manhattan 8 The Cathedral of Learning was commissioned in 1921 and ground was broken in 1926 under general contractor Stone amp Webster 9 The first class was held in the building in 1931 and its exterior finished in October 1934 10 prior to its formal dedication in June 1937 It is a Pittsburgh landmark 2 11 listed in the National Register of Historic Places 12 13 Cathedral of LearningU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic districtContributing propertyCity of Pittsburgh Historic StructurePittsburgh Landmark PHLFThe Cathedral of Learning at the University of PittsburghShow map of PittsburghShow map of PennsylvaniaShow map of the United StatesLocationPittsburgh Pennsylvania USACoordinates40 26 39 N 79 57 11 W 40 44417 N 79 95306 W 40 44417 79 95306Built1926 98 years ago 1926 ArchitectCharles KlauderArchitectural styleLate Gothic Revival with some Art Deco influencesPart ofSchenley Farms Historic District ID83002213 NRHP reference No 75001608 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHPNovember 3 1975 1 Designated CPJuly 22 1983 1 Designated CPHSFebruary 22 1977 2 Designated PHLF1970 Croghan Schenley Ballroom 3 1972 Cathedral of Learning interiors 4 1973 Cathedral of Learning 5 Colloquially referred to as Cathy by Pitt students 14 15 the Cathedral of Learning is a steel frame structure overlaid with Indiana limestone and contains more than 2 000 rooms and windows It functions as a primary classroom and administrative center of the university and is home to the Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences the School of Social Work and many of its departments as well as the University Honors College It houses many specialty spaces including a studio theater food court study lounges offices computer and language labs 31 Nationality Rooms and a half acre 2000 m2 22 000 ft2 4 story high vaulted gothic study and event hall The building contains noted examples of stained glass stone wood and iron work and is often used by the university in photographs postcards and other advertisements Contents 1 Use 2 History 2 1 World War II 3 Funding 4 Commons Room 5 Nationality Rooms 5 1 Classrooms 5 2 Proposed rooms 6 Other notable spaces 6 1 Babcock Room 6 2 Braun Room 6 3 Croghan Schenley Ballroom 6 4 Frick Auditorium 6 5 Humanities Center 6 6 Cultural Studies Film Studies and GSWS program space 6 7 Mulert Memorial Room 6 8 Richard E Rauh Studio Theatre 6 9 University Honors College 7 Recent proposed changes to the Cathedral 8 References in popular culture and student life 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksUse edit nbsp The Cathedral of LearningThe basement and floors up to and including floor 40 are used for educational purposes although most floors above 36 house the building s mechanical equipment These floors include theaters computer laboratories language laboratories classrooms and departmental offices The basement contains a black box theater and the ground floor contains computer labs language labs classrooms and the Cathedral Cafe food court 16 17 The lobby comprising the first through third floors contains a massive gothic Commons Room that is used as a general study area and for special events and is ringed by three floors of classrooms including on the first and third floors the 31 Nationality Rooms designed by members of Pittsburgh s ethnic communities in the styles of different nations and ethnic groups Twenty nine of these serve as functional classrooms while more conventional classrooms are located on the second floor and elsewhere throughout the building The first floor also serves as home to the offices of the Chancellor Executive Vice Chancellor and other administration offices as well as the Nationality Rooms Gift Shop The fourth floor which was previously home to the main stacks of the university s library and the McCarl Center for Nontraditional Student Success 18 now houses a mix of interdisciplinary studies programs The fifth floor originally housed the main borrowing reference and reading rooms of the university library and now houses the Department of English The Pitt Humanities Center is housed on the sixth floor The University Honors College is located on the 35th and 36th floors The Cathedral of Learning houses the Department of Philosophy 19 as of 2009 update considered one of the top five in the United States 20 and the Department of History and Philosophy of Science 21 consistently ranked at the top of the field 22 23 24 Other departments in the Cathedral include English Religious Studies Theatre Arts and the School of Social Work which maintains the highest classrooms in the building located on the 23rd floor 25 note 1 Floors 38 40 are closed to the general public as they contain electrical wiring for the building as well as the Babcock Room a large conference room on the 40th floor used for meetings seminars and special events and which provides a panoramic view of downtown Pittsburgh and the rest of the university The 40th floor balcony also houses a nesting pair of Peregrine falcons A view from the top is available via a webcam 26 Golden lights dubbed victory lights surround the outside of the highest floors and are lit following Pitt football wins and other notable victories giving the upper part of the cathedral an amber glow 27 The top of the building serves as the site for the transmitter of the student run radio station WPTS FM 28 as well as the amateur radio repeater W3YJ which is run by the Panther Amateur Radio club on a frequency of 443 45 MHz 29 30 Cathedral of Learning Use and Notable Spaces by FloorFloor UseSubbasement Tunnel to Stephen Foster MemorialBasement Rauh Studio TheatreGround Cathedral Cafe Computer labs language labs lecture halls Testing Center1 Commons Room Nationality Rooms Crogan Schenley Ballroom Nationality Rooms Gift Shop Offices of University Chancellor and Vice Chancellor2 Commons Room class and lecture rooms Mulert Memorial Room3 Commons Room Nationality Rooms Frick Auditorium class and lecture rooms4 Cultural Studies Film Studies and GSWS program5 English Department English Commons Room6 Humanities Center7 Office of the Chief Information Officer IBM 360 display8 Office of the Provost Floor Use9 Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences main offices10 Department of Philosophy11 Center for Philosophy of Science12 Slavic languages Braun Room Nationality Room and Intercultural Exchange Program office13 Departments of Hispanic French and Italian languages14 Department of Communication andWilliam Pitt Debating Union15 German Language Classics16 Department of Theater Arts17 CFO Institutional Research office18 Office of the Chief Financial Officer19 Financial Information Systems20 Center on Race and Social Problems21 School of Social Work22 School of Social Work offices23 School of Social Work classrooms Floor Use24 Office of University Counsel25 Office of University Counsel Cyber Institute of Law and Politics26 Department of Religious Studies27 Department of Asian Studies28 Department of Linguistics29 ROTC30 Payment Processing and Financial Records31 Financial Information Administration Accounting Research32 IT Business Solutions33 Purchasing Services and Supplier Management34 Purchasing Services35 Honors College36 Honors College37 Honors College38 Mechanical39 Mechanical40 Babcock RoomRefs 31 History editIn 1921 John Gabbert Bowman became the tenth chancellor of the university At that time the school consisted of a series of buildings constructed along Henry Hornbostel s plan for the campus and included temporary wooden structures built during World War I He then began to envision a tall building that would be later termed the Cathedral of Learning to provide a dramatic symbol of education for the city and alleviate overcrowding by adding much needed space in order to meet present and future needs of the university His reasoning is summarized in this quote The building was to be more than a schoolhouse it was to be a symbol of the life that Pittsburgh through the years had wanted to live It was to make visible something of the spirit that was in the hearts of pioneers as long ago they sat in their log cabins and thought by candlelight of the great city that would sometime spread out beyond their three rivers and that even they were starting to build Bowman looked at a 14 acre 5 7 ha plot of land named Frick Acres On November 26 1921 with aid from the Mellon family the university was given the 2 5 million plot and began plans for a proper university building on the site 32 One of the foremost Gothic architects of the time Philadelphian Charles Klauder was hired to design the tower The design took two years to finish with the final plan attempting to fuse the idea of a modern skyscraper with the tradition and ideals of Gothic architecture The plans received strong resistance from the community and from some university officials who felt it was too tall for the city nbsp Fountain outside of the CathedralLocal legend states that to counteract this resistance Bowman ordered that the construction of the walls would start at the top floor and work its way down so the project could not be canceled This has been traced to an account on November 21 1943 issue of At Ease a tabloid related to local military personnel on campus which stated that the masonry was started from the top downward Construction photographs show that this was not the case and that some stonework was done on the first floor before any other stonework was begun One engineer with the company working on the Cathedral who explained that the exterior walls of the cathedral are not load bearing Because of this many similar buildings would start construction at the third or fourth floors Practically this makes sense as it allows easy movement of building materials and equipment into and out of the building Instead in the cathedral s case the issue was one of the stone that would be used in lower stories In fact the quarry was not prepared to deliver the stone on schedule so construction was delayed and work began on the higher stories in the literal sense of the word Late Gothic Revival architecture culminated in the University of Pittsburgh s skyscraping Cathedral of Learning Marcus Whiffen architecture historian 33 When construction started on the Cathedral of Learning in 1926 it was the tallest building in Pittsburgh although the Gulf Tower 1932 was completed and surpassed it by the time the Cathedral of Learning was officially dedicated in June 1937 Today it remains the tallest educational building in the Western hemisphere the second tallest university building in the world behind the 36 story 240 m including a 57 m spire Moscow State University main building completed in 1953 7 and the fourth tallest educational building in the world behind the Moscow State University and Mode Gakuen Cocoon 204 m 34 and Spiral Towers 170 m 35 both completed in 2008 and located in Japan World War II edit On July 26 1940 as World War II was starting a bomb threat was made against the structure with extra guards being posted to secure it and the authorities not ruling out possible wartime sabotage 36 During the war effort the cathedral was assigned to house feed and instruct roughly 1 000 of the Army Air Corps forerunner of today s U S Air Force as well as dozens of Army engineers The building had at least 12 floors dedicated for military use from 1943 until 1945 37 Funding editFundraising for this project came in many forms including donations from industries corporations individuals and foreign governments To raise public views of the cathedral and at the same time finance the construction Bowman started a fundraising campaign in 1925 An important part of this campaign was a project reaching out to the children of the city entitled Buy a Brick for Pitt Each schoolchild sent a dime 0 10 and a letter to the university explaining how they earned the dime for the building In exchange the child received a certificate for one brick contained in the cathedral A total of 97 000 certificates were issued to children Commons Room edit nbsp Commons RoomThe main part of the cathedral s first floor is the Commons Room called one of the great architectural fantasies of the twentieth century is a fifteenth century English perpendicular Gothic style hall that covers half an acre 2 000 m2 and extends upward four stories reaching 52 feet 16 m tall 38 The room was a gift of Andrew Mellon It is a piece of true Gothic architecture no steel supports were used in the construction of its arches Each arch is a true arch and they support their own weight Each base for the arches weighs five tons and it is said that they are so firmly placed that each could hold a large truck The large central piers act only as screens for the structural steel that holds up the upper floors of the building Despite its heavy use the Commons Room is kept quiet by the use of Guastavino acoustical tiles as the stones between the ribs of vaulting 38 This feature was insisted upon by Chancellor Bowman The architect Klauder objected due to the increased costs of this construction method Bowman responded with the comment You cannot build a great University with fraud in it 39 Klauder considered the Commons Room to be his greatest achievement 39 Joseph Gattoni designed the stonework much of which depicts western Pennsylvanian plant life The walls are made of Indiana limestone and the floor is green Vermont slate The wrought iron in the room including the large gates leading to the elevators was a gift from George Hubbard Clapp and was designed by the ironworker Samuel Yellin Over the gates are two lines by Robert Bridges from an untitled poem Here is eternal spring for you the very stars of heaven are new 40 Also located in the corridors surrounding the Commons Room are plaques featuring calligraphy designed and hand cut in slate by Edward Catich including one featuring a poem by Lawrence Lee titled The Cathedral 41 as well as stained glass windows by Charles Connick 42 Nationality Rooms editMain article Nationality Rooms nbsp The Austrian Classroom one of 31 Nationality Rooms in the Cathedral of Learning nbsp The Chinese ClassroomThe cathedral is home to 31 Nationality Rooms located on the first and third floors 29 working classrooms and two rooms used mostly for display or occasional special events Each nationality room is designed to celebrate a different culture that had an influence on Pittsburgh s growth depicting an era prior to or in the singular case of the French Classroom just after 1787 the year of the university s founding and of the signing of the U S Constitution The Nationality Room programs began in 1926 when Bowman decided that he wanted to involve the community as much as he could in constructing the cathedral so he proposed that each nationality that had a significant number of people in Pittsburgh would be allowed to design their nationality s room for the cathedral Each group had to form a Room Committee responsible for all fundraising designing and acquisition The university provided only the room and upon completion upkeep for perpetuity All other materials labor and design were provided by the individual committees These were sometimes aided by foreign governments and the rooms contain many authentic artifacts and materials from the country represented 43 A typical room on the 1st floor those built between 1938 and 1957 took between three and ten years to complete and cost the equivalent of US 300 000 in 2006 dollars More recent rooms have cost in the range of 750 000 and up 44 Classrooms edit African Heritage Armenian Austrian Chinese Czechoslovak Early American Display English French German Greek Hungarian Indian Irish Israel Heritage Italian Japanese Lithuanian Korean Norwegian Philippine Polish Romanian Russian Scottish Swedish Swiss Syrian Lebanon Display Turkish Ukrainian Welsh YugoslavProposed rooms edit There are six nationality rooms in various stages of planning to add to the current 31 45 Danish 46 Finnish 47 Iranian 48 Latin American amp Caribbean 49 Moroccan 50 Thai 51 Other notable spaces edit nbsp Dedication panel of the Babcock Memorial RoomThere are several other notable facilities and rooms within the Cathedral of Learning In addition these spaces do not fall under the auspices of the Nationality Rooms program Babcock Room edit The Edward V Babcock Memorial Room is a plush carpeted wood paneled conference room constructed on the 40th floor for use as the university trustees boardroom Funded by a Babcock family grant of 327 000 3 32 million in 2022 dollars 52 and dedicated in November 1958 44 all of the room s features are original except for the lighting furniture and carpeting 53 The room s square shape is modified by four alcoves in one of which is a portrait of Babcock by Malcolm Stevens Parcell The walls featuring intricate geometric patterns are paneled in Appalachian white oak with burled walnut inlays and touches of rosewood 54 The windows adorned by leaf patterned curtains boast a spectacular panoramic view of the surrounding area 53 55 The room is also adjoined by a kitchen 56 Access to the room is limited to a spiral staircase and an elevator both requiring a key that originate on the 36th floor 56 During the early 1970s at the height of student activism a group of protesting students attempted to barricade the room during a trustees meeting 44 57 Today the trustees have outgrown the room and generally meet in the Assembly Room of the William Pitt Union The Babcock room now serves as a seminar and meeting room and is also used for special events 53 A pair of peregrine falcons nests on the balcony outside the room 58 Braun Room edit nbsp The Braun Room in the Cathedral of LearningFollowing the opening of the Cathedral of Learning the offices of the Dean of Women moved to the 12th floor of the Cathedral in 1938 The interior was unfinished but Dean Thyrsa Amos envisioned a dignified and beautiful space for women to meet When Dean Amos died in 1941 the new quarters were still unfinished The Alumnae Association created the Thyrsa W Amos Fund to plaster the walls and to furnish Room 1217 in her name Room 1217 was never finished but after World War II the other rooms on the twelfth floor were completed including room 1201 now known as the Braun Room Mrs A E Braun donated the furnishings and floral carved mahogany wood paneling which she had purchased in 1941 from the library of the home of Grant McCargo in the East End of Pittsburgh The Braun Room was dedicated in 1946 and serves along with its furniture as an example of a modern reproduction of Louis XV design Original blue carpeting was replaced in 1955 with a Persian rug named The Iron Rug of Persia that was donated by the daughter and son in law of A E Braun Restored in 2015 the rug was made for a regional Khan in the northern part of Iran around 1810 59 Other features of the room include a low bookcase bordered and topped with classic carving that was crafted by university carpenters to replace the original fireplace whose inclusion was impractical on the 12th floor along with two crystal drop chandeliers 60 Dean Helen Pool Rush and her successor Dean Savina Skewis carried on the traditions of Dean Amos until the Dean of Women s Office was closed in 1969 and its functions and quarters were assumed by other departments 61 The Braun Room is used for meetings and study abroad scholarship selection panels Croghan Schenley Ballroom edit nbsp Croghan Schenley Ballroom in the Cathedral of LearningThe Croghan Schenley room situated on the first floor of the Cathedral in room 156 is actually two adjoining Greek Revival rooms the Ballroom and the Oval Room connected by a hidden passageway in the Ballroom s fireplace The rooms were originally part of William Croghan Jr s mansion known as the Picnic House built in 1830 in the Stanton Heights area of Pittsburgh The rooms themselves were created in 1835 by the Philadelphia carver Mordecai Van Horn and they have been regarded as being among the most lavish examples of Greek Revival designs in America 38 His daughter Mary Elizabeth went to boarding school in New York but in 1842 at the age of fifteen she eloped with 43 year old Edward Wyndham Harrington Schenley a captain in the British military The elopement caused a family schism Mary would not visit often and in an effort to convince her to move back to Pittsburgh the new rooms were commissioned Following the death of William Croghan in 1850 the mansion was run by caretakers with no permanent residents for some 60 years William S Miller then president of Steelwood Corp purchased the Croghan mansion following World War II and it was soon leveled for a new housing development but the Croghan Schenley rooms were spared 62 In 1955 the rooms donated by Miller were dismantled and rebuilt in the cathedral except that the original ceilings had to be lowered about 8 inches to accommodate the available space In 1982 the rooms were refurbished to their 19th century glory Highlighting the ballroom are the hand cut glass chandelier and four wooden hand carved Greek columns surviving examples of western Pennsylvania s Greek classical revival period popular with those of means in the 1830s The Croghan Schenley rooms are the last extant vestiges of the estate of Mary Schenley who before she died gave much of her holdings and property to the city of Pittsburgh including Schenley farms where the Cathedral sits and Schenley Park 63 nbsp The Frick AuditoriumStories tell of a ghost speculated to be that of Mary Schenley that is said to roam the Ballroom and Nationality Rooms The doors to the rooms are locked every night but furniture is sometimes said to be found rearranged by daylight staff The swinging of the chandelier has been said to indicate her presence 64 65 66 Frick Auditorium edit The Frick Auditorium is a lecture hall in room 324 of the Cathedral of Learning Originally conceptualized as the Fine Arts Lecture Room intended to complement the Fine Arts Department then located on the seventh floor 67 the room was completed in 1939 68 and features stone mullions chambranle and other trim as well as wooden lecture seating and a coffered ceiling A centerpiece element in the room is a Nicholas Lochoff reproduction of The Resurrection by Piero della Francesca that was purchased for the lecture hall by Helen Clay Frick Frick would later donate a large collection of Lochoff reproductions to the university which are on display in the Nicholas Lochoff Cloister in the university s Frick Fine Arts Building 69 Humanities Center edit nbsp Entrance to the Humanities CenterThe University of Pittsburgh s Humanities Center part of School of Arts and Sciences is housed in the Cathedral of Learning s room 602 which was a sixth floor space once occupied by the Darlington Memorial Library Following digitization and protective storage of the library s materials its space was renovated in 2009 by architect Rob Pfaffmann to house the center which now includes office space for staff and visiting fellows 70 The Humanities Center space retains much of the original character and many of the antique furnishings originally bequeathed to the university by the Darlington family and features moldings and green walls that are duplicated from the 18th mansion Graeme Park a Pennsylvania colonial era governor s residence 71 The Center for Humanities was finished in time for an open house that was part a conference hosted by the center on November 14 15 2009 72 nbsp Humanities CenterThe space served as the home of The Darlington Memorial Library from 1936 until its recent conversion to the Humanities Center 73 The library was entered through a memorial vestibule and consisted of a central room with eight alcoves Among other notable furnishings it contained a wrought iron entrance gate by Samuel Yellin 71 The library was given to the University of Pittsburgh by the daughters of William McCullough Darlington and Mary Carson Darlington The initial gift of eleven thousand volumes was made in 1918 by Mary O Hara Darlington and Edith Darlington Ammon This was followed by Mary O Hara Darlington s bequest in 1925 of the remainder of the family s library and much of the family estate The Darlington family s tremendous interest in historical research was the force behind creating what was said to be the largest private library west of the Alleghenies The library collection is particularly rich in material about the French and Indian War and the history of Western Pennsylvania and the Ohio Valley as both William and Mary Darlington researched and published in these areas While the collection s main focus is on American history and literature other collection highlights include rare maps and atlases works on ornithology and natural history and early travel narratives The Darlington s son O Hara Darlington also amassed collections of Victorian literature sporting books and works of illustrators and caricaturists The collection also has been enriched over the years by donations from other individuals and organizations which especially have enhanced its content about the history of the Western Pennsylvania region 74 Before renovation of the original library space its materials were digitized and placed online at The Darlington Digital Library 75 The original sometimes fragile materials of the library were placed in storage for availability to researchers upon request 76 A virtual tour of the Darlington Memorial Library as it previously existed in the Cathedral of Learning is available at the main entrance 77 and the main room 78 Cultural Studies Film Studies and GSWS program space edit nbsp Former McCarl CenterLocated on the fourth floor of the Cathedral of Learning the current home of both the Cultural Studies Film Studies and Gender Sexuality amp Women s Studies GSWS programs 79 was the prior home of the McCarl Center for Nontraditional Student Success until it moved to Wesley W Posvar Hall in 2014 80 The space occupies what once housed two levels of the main stacks of the university s library 81 The 2 500 square foot 230 m2 space was previously opened as the 537 000 McCarl Center in 2002 82 Made possible by a gift from F James and Foster J J McCarl 82 it was designed by Alan J Cuteri and his architectural firm Strada LLC and includes wood finishes double height spaces with high ceilings and windows a main corridor conceived as an interior street and many elements that refer to the Cathedral of Learning s Gothic architecture including decorative painted metal columns with contemporary buttress style arches 18 Today the space includes a resource library offices and seminar room and class room that are used by the Cultural Studies and GSWS programs 79 Students in gender studies classes have access to the gender studies library which houses classic and recent books on gender sexuality and to two gender studies classrooms The GSWS faculty offices are also nearby Also hanging in a hallway on the fourth floor outside the space three unsigned and undated 7 by 3 foot 2 1 by 0 9 m glass encased murals that depict Renaissance painting styles and which have long belonged to the university but are of unknown origin 83 Mulert Memorial Room edit nbsp Mulert Memorial RoomLocated in room 204 the walnut paneled Mulert Memorial classroom was designed by Philadelphia architect Gustav Ketterer and university architect Albert Klimcheck 84 The room features wood floors fluted ionic columns red velvet draperies and student chairs with leather seats 85 The room s doors have fluted jams and panelings of Greek rosettes A Mulert family coat of arms and memorial inscription is located on the rear wall of the room 86 The room was provided for in the will of the late Mt Lebanon resident Justus Mulert the room was dedicated on December 21 1942 and serves as a memorial to Mulert s wife Louise and his son Ferdinand Max who died in 1912 during his senior year at Washington and Jefferson College 87 Richard E Rauh Studio Theatre edit nbsp Studio TheatreThe Richard E Rauh Studio Theatre a facility utilized by the Department of Theatre Arts is located in the basement of the cathedral The Rauh Studio Theatre is a black box space that can be configured for almost any set requirements It is home to student directed laboratory productions play readings Dark Night Cabaret and played host to Pittsburgh s longest running theatre show Friday Nite Improvs started in 1989 by graduate theatre students 88 In 2017 the Studio Theatre was named in honor of Pitt alumnus Richard E Raugh who donated 1 million to support it and the university s theater productions 89 University Honors College edit The University Honors College dedicated in 1986 is housed in a 2002 2003 renovated space on the 35th and 36th floors of the cathedral The Honors College provides support and enriched opportunities for scholarship among the university s undergraduates and offers a Bachelor of Philosophy BPhil degree 90 The 2002 2003 renovation by Rothschild Doyno Collaborative of Pittsburgh s Strip District showcased an existing two story arched window that is visible at night for miles around The four leaf medieval quatrefoil medallion at the top of the cathedral is a central motif in the design of the Honors College Stained glass behind the reception desk at the center of the space was designed by Glenn Greene Glass of Regent Square and centers on a design representing the four seasons done in polished agate Wrought ironwork was produced by Vic Reynaud of Technique Manufacturing in the spirit of Samuel Yellin who did the Commons Room ironwork 91 nbsp South face of the cathedral from the Frick Fine Arts Building nbsp The Cathedral Lawn to the east nbsp Cathedral and the Stephen Foster Memorial from across Schenley Plaza nbsp Northwest side of the cathedral from across the lawn of the Sailors and Soldiers Memorial nbsp Detail of top floors on the western face nbsp North face top floors nbsp Panther fountain on the west entrance nbsp East side nbsp View from the South Side Slopes nbsp Samuel Yellin ironwork lamp nbsp South entrance detail nbsp Exterior quatrefoil stonework detail prior to 2007 cleaning nbsp Charles Connick designed Class of 1940 Window in the Quo Vadis niche nbsp Lightwell containing the painted ceramic sculpture Third Century by Jerry Caplan nbsp Detail of Joseph Gattoni stonework on a first floor archway nbsp Detail of Commons Room furniture carvings nbsp Commons Room ceiling vaults nbsp Commons Room nbsp Commons Room nbsp Looking west from the Honors College nbsp Cathedral of Learning lit up with the victory lights nbsp Forbes Field about 1963 from Cathedral of Learning nbsp Cathedral seen from Wesley W Posvar HallRecent proposed changes to the Cathedral edit nbsp University Honors College on the 35th and 36th floorIn the early 2000s there was some controversy over whether university funds should be used to illuminate the Cathedral at night or to clean the building s facade The cleaning was abandoned because it was too costly Some Oakland residents spoke out against the cleaning stating that the years of soot should stay as an homage to Pittsburgh s industrial past However the university approved nearly 5 million for cleaning and restoration of stonework on February 28 2007 The work was completed at the end of 2007 restoring the exterior of the building to its original condition In the wake of the September 11 attacks the cathedral was deemed at risk because no obstacles were in place to prevent a vehicle from driving into the entrances of the building To address this concern the university installed bollards that rise out of the sidewalk 92 As of 2001 update around 200 window air conditioners operated in the building During the 2000s the university focused upon providing air conditioning to the first four floors which contain many classrooms The plan called for the complete central cooling of the entire Cathedral of Learning by the end of the decade 93 In 2014 the Property and Facilities Committee approved a plan for a 10 4 million upgrade of the building s elevator system 94 This is the second major upgrade of the elevators implemented in the building s history Originally manually controlled and later automated to Westinghouse Selectomatic in 1971 the system was completely modernized into Otis Compass destination dispatch in 2016 References in popular culture and student life edit nbsp The Cathedral of Learning lit up during the fall of 2008 for the Pittsburgh Festival of Light in celebration of the city of Pittsburgh s 250th anniversary The mosaic created by French artist Lucette de Rugy was inspired by Gutenberg s 15th century printing press nbsp One A Day 365 Views of the Cathedral of Learning painted by Felix de la Concha a permanent exhibit at the University of Pittsburgh s Alumni HallIn Gwyn Cready s comedic romance novel Tumbling Through Time the hero Magnus Knightley is a visiting professor whose office is on the 32nd floor of the Cathedral of Learning Several scenes in the book take place in the cathedral The Cathedral of Learning is described in Michael Chabon s novel The Mysteries of Pittsburgh In Bethesda Softwork s Fallout 3 The Pitt the Cathedral of Learning appears as the headquarters of the rulers of a post apocalyptic Pittsburgh 95 The Cathedral of Learning was profiled on John Ratzenberger s Made in America TV show on the Travel Channel 96 The Cathedral of Learning and Nationality Rooms were featured on the Canadian French language travel channel Evasion in the Pittsburgh episode of 15 bonnes raisons d aller a that first aired in September 2012 97 98 The cathedral is sometimes referred to by Pitt students as the drunken compass due to its prominence of visibility throughout the neighborhood of Oakland that is used to guide students returning from parties back to the dorms or apartments 99 Along with the Early American Nationality Room and the Croghan Schenley Ballroom the Cathedral Cafe food court on the ground level is purported to be haunted 65 99 Portions of the movie Roommates 1995 starring D B Sweeney Peter Falk and Julianne Moore and directed by Peter Yates were filmed in the Cathedral of Learning including room 324 100 Richard Gere s character in The Mothman Prophecies 2002 appears in a scene where he is sitting on a bench on the Cathedral of Learning lawn 100 The Cathedral of Learning can be seen in the background of the climactic scene in which Jackie Robinson heads for home base at Forbes Field in the biographical film 42 2013 101 as well as in the backdrop of the graduation scene filmed on the lawn of Soldiers and Sailors Memorial for fictional Rosman University in the movie Sorority Row 2009 102 It can also be seen in the movie Wonder Boys 2000 a film adaptation of Pitt alumnus Michael Chabon s 1995 novel of the same title 100 as well as in the original 1951 version of Angels in the Outfield 103 Artist Harry Scheuch painted the Cathedral of Learning during its construction in the 1930s as a series for the Public Works of Art Project The works are now part of the Smithsonian American Art Museum s exhibit entitled 1934 A New Deal for Artists 104 Artist Felix de la Concha painted the Cathedral of Learning 365 times in One a Day 365 Views of the Cathedral of Learning The collection is now on display at the Alumni Hall University of Pittsburgh a building just in front of the cathedral 105 106 In one of the most famous photographs in baseball history by George Silk and published in Life magazine students from the University of Pittsburgh are seen cheering on the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 1960 World Series from their vantage atop the Cathedral of Learning high above Forbes Field 107 108 Assumption University in Thailand has constructed a 39 story 522 foot 159 m building that is modeled and named after the Cathedral of Learning and serves as the centerpiece of their Suvarnabhumi campus 109 The Cathedral of Learning features in Chris Kuzneski s 2009 novel The Prophecy On October 27 2018 the cathedral was darkened following Pitt s victory over Duke out of respect for the 11 victims killed in the Tree of Life synagogue shooting which had occurred earlier that day in nearby Squirrel Hill The Cathedral of Learning features in the song Cathy by Dhyan released in 2019 as a single from the album My Hero In 1987 the Cathedral of Learning appears in a panel of The Amazing Spider Man issue 292 where Spider Man goes to Pittsburgh Notes edit Although there are no classrooms higher than the 23rd floor classes occasionally meet in rooms on higher floors either temporarily e g if a normal classroom is temporarily unavailable or by consensus of the students and instructor if a class is small enough to meet in a professor s personal office or a student lounge References edit a b c National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 a b Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation Local Historic Designations May 1 2002 Retrieved February 25 2008 Historic Landmark Plaques 1968 2009 PDF Pittsburgh PA Pittsburgh History amp Landmarks Foundation 2010 3 Retrieved June 25 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Historic Landmark Plaques 1968 2009 PDF Pittsburgh PA Pittsburgh History amp Landmarks Foundation 2010 5 Retrieved June 25 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Historic Landmark Plaques 1968 2009 PDF Pittsburgh PA Pittsburgh History amp Landmarks Foundation 2010 6 Retrieved June 25 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Cathedral of Learning Pittsburgh U S A Emporis Archived from the original on August 20 2004 Retrieved August 2 2010 a b Moscow State University Moscow Russia Emporis Archived from the original on April 6 2004 Retrieved August 2 2010 Cathedral of Learning Pittsburgh SkyscraperPage com Retrieved December 7 2012 C A Stone Is Dead PDF DailNew York Times Obituaries page 21 February 26 1941 Retrieved July 9 2019 Alberts Robert C 1986 Pitt The Story of the University of Pittsburgh 1787 1987 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 8229 1150 0 Retrieved November 10 2009 Internet Archive Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation PHLF Plaques amp Registries January 27 2007 Archived from the original on January 27 2007 Retrieved February 25 2008 National Register of Historical Places PENNSYLVANIA PA Allegheny County National Register of Historic Places National Park Service Retrieved August 2 2010 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Cathedral of Learning PDF 1967 Retrieved June 8 2010 Iacullo Jessica April 15 2014 YouTube sensations perform at Bigelow Bash The Pitt News Retrieved March 5 2016 Schackner Bill March 4 2016 Pitt s Cathy gets people chatty about nickname Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh PA Retrieved March 5 2016 Campus Dining Locations Panther Central Dining Services University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on January 3 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Locations Equipment and Hours Information Technology Computing Services and Systems Development University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on August 14 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 a b McCarl Center College of General Studies University of Pittsburgh 2007 Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved August 2 2010 Department of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh January 6 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Leitner Brian 2009 The Philosophical Gourmet Report 2009 Overall Rankings The Philosophical Gourmet Report Brian Leiter s Ranking of Graduate Programs in Philosophy in the English Speaking World Blackwell Archived from the original on August 13 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Department of History and Philosophy of Science University of Pittsburgh July 10 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Internet Archive The Philosophical Gourmet Report 2004 2006 Philosophy of the Sciences and Mathematics 2008 Archived from the original on November 7 2002 Retrieved March 26 2008 The Philosophical Gourmet Report 2006 2008 Breakdown Philosophy of Science 2008 Archived from the original on September 9 2012 Retrieved March 26 2008 Graduate Programs in History and Philosophy of Science philosophylists info 2005 Archived from the original on January 22 2008 Retrieved August 2 2010 Media Enhanced Classrooms Cathedral of Learning Center for Instructional Development amp Distance Education University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on July 10 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Live Webcams Cathedral University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on August 2 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Alumni Traditions Victory Lights Pitt Alumni Association Retrieved August 2 2010 92 1 WPTS Pittsburgh WPTS Pittsburgh Retrieved December 22 2010 PA SitRep com Pennsylvania Situation Report Web Site O Hara Township Amateur Radio Emergency Communications 443 45 Repeater Retrieved December 22 2010 W3YJ PARC Repeater Pittsburgh PA Amateur Radio Repeaters on Waymarking com Waymarking Retrieved December 22 2010 Barlow Kimberly K July 21 2016 Restacking the Cathedral of Learning University Times Vol 48 no 23 Retrieved August 17 2020 Pittsburgh Post Gazette News Links Post gazette com Retrieved on July 17 2013 Trump James D March 1973 National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form Cathedral of Learning PDF Pennsylvania s Historic Architecture amp Archaeology Retrieved October 8 2009 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Mode Gakuen Cocoon Tower Tokyo Japan Emporis Archived from the original on February 23 2007 Retrieved August 2 2010 Mode Gakuen Spiral Towers Nagoya Japan Emporis Retrieved August 2 2010 dead link Reading Eagle Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved March 15 2018 The Daily Times Google News Archive Search news google com Retrieved March 15 2018 a b c Toker Franklin 2009 Pittsburgh A New Portrait Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press p 327 ISBN 978 0 8229 4371 6 a b Bowman John G 1963 Commons Room Unofficial Notes Pittsburgh p 78 OCLC 2572578 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bridges Robert 1912 Poetical Works of Robert Bridges Excluding the Eight Dramas London H Frowde Oxford University Press p 314 ISBN 978 0 19 254114 7 Burger Mary Lou June 2 1976 Lawrence Lee Poem Plaque to be Dedicated at Pitt Press release Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Department of News and Publications Archived from the original on September 22 2012 Retrieved May 21 2011 Donovan Sandra Fischione November 23 2008 Pittsburgh stained glass artist s work beautifies region Pittsburgh Tribune Review Archived from the original on September 13 2012 Retrieved November 12 2009 The Nationality Rooms about nationality rooms Archived October 28 2012 at the Wayback Machine Pitt edu Retrieved on July 17 2013 a b c Alberts Robert C 1986 Pitt the story of the University of Pittsburgh 1787 1987 University of Pittsburgh Press p 135 ISBN 978 0 8229 1150 0 Retrieved August 2 2010 The Nationality Rooms rooms in planning University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on May 28 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Fedele John March 12 2007 The Cathedral of Learning A History Pitt Chronicle University News and Magazines University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 2 2010 Finnish Nationality Room Information The Finlandia Foundation Pittsburgh Chapter and The Finnish Committee University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 2 2010 Iranian Nationality Room November 18 2010 Archived from the original on December 26 2010 Retrieved December 16 2010 The Latin American amp Caribbean Heritage Room Bienvenidos Amigos Welcome Friends The Latin American amp Caribbean Heritage Room committee University of Pittsburgh January 8 2010 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved August 2 2010 Bruhns E Maxine Spring 2014 Message From the Director PDF Nationality Rooms Newsletter Vol 95 Nationality Rooms and Intercultural Exchange Programs at the University of Pittsburgh p 3 Retrieved April 12 2014 U of Pittsburgh Thai room planned Pittsburgh Post Gazette May 12 2005 Retrieved August 2 2010 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved May 28 2023 a b c Gillogly Keith February 28 2011 Top of Cathedral offers rooms great view The Pitt News Pittsburgh PA Retrieved March 1 2011 Pfaffmann Rob September 2005 University of Pittsburgh Civic Center Conservation Plan PDF Pfaffmann Associates PC and the Getty Foundation Campus Heritage Program 62 Retrieved January 27 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Holohan Meghan Fall 2003 Standing Tall Pitt Magazine Archived from the original on June 16 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 a b Secrets of the Cathedral Starting at the top University Times Vol 36 no 2 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved August 1 2010 Rea William H Remembering Wes Friends family former colleagues reminisce University Times Vol 34 no 1 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 1 2010 For the birds University Times Vol 40 no 19 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh May 29 2008 Retrieved August 1 2010 Sivak Maryann Fall 2015 Nationality Rooms Program Activities PDF Nationality Rooms Newsletter 98 7 Retrieved November 15 2015 Pfaffmann Rob September 2005 University of Pittsburgh Civic Center Conservation Plan PDF Pfaffmann Associates PC and the Getty Foundation Campus Heritage Program 63 Retrieved January 27 2010 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Twelfth Floor The History of Women at Pitt Office of the Provost University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on March 20 2011 Retrieved August 2 2010 Life Visits a Haunted House LIFE June 11 1945 pp 122 125 Retrieved May 26 2014 Secrets of the Cathedral The Commons Room mac10 umc pitt edu University Times University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on July 20 2007 Retrieved June 9 2007 Heller LaBelle Greg May 11 2006 Could your University be full of spooky spirits The Pitt News Pittsburgh PA Retrieved August 1 2011 a b Three Rivers Haunts amp History p 8 Retrieved November 25 2009 Scott Gene March 1 2009 The Next Page Mansion of Ironies Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh PA Retrieved August 1 2011 Gibel Lukens Jeannine November 5 1993 A Different Approach the Arts and Crafts Village Planning the Pitt Campus Dreams and Schemes Never Realized University of Pittsburgh Documenting Pitt Pitt 27 48 Winter 1947 Archived from the original on February 10 2016 Retrieved April 12 2014 Frick Fine Arts Building amp The Nicholas Lochoff Cloister PDF Frick Fine Arts Library Library Guide Series 25 August 15 2006 Archived from the original PDF on June 27 2010 Retrieved November 19 2009 White Patricia Lomando January 19 2010 Pitt s New Humanities Center To Foster Collaborative Work Pitt Chronicle Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on June 17 2010 Retrieved January 20 2010 a b Starret Agnes Lynch 1938 The Darlington Memorial Library Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press p 3 Retrieved November 18 2009 Humanities Center hosts inaugural conference University Times Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh November 12 2009 Retrieved November 18 2009 Report of the Chancellor to the Trustees July 1 1934 to June 30 1936 University of Pittsburgh Bulletin 33 2 95 96 October 15 1936 Archived from the original on August 13 2012 Retrieved November 18 2009 Darlington Memorial Library Archived from the original on April 10 2008 Retrieved November 18 2009 The Darlington Digital Library University of Pittsburgh Retrieved November 18 2009 Hart Peter Barlow Kimberly K September 3 2009 What s New Places University Times Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on June 9 2010 Retrieved September 8 2009 Darlington Memorial Library main entrance virtual tour Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved August 2 2010 Darlington Memorial Library main room virtual tour Archived from the original on May 20 2011 Retrieved August 2 2010 a b Somerville K Briar Summer 2015 GSWS Program s New Home in the Cathedral of Learning Gender Sexuality amp Women s Studies Program 2 Retrieved October 12 2015 Barlow Kimberly K Levine Marty August 29 2013 What s New at Pitt Places University Times Vol 46 no 1 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Retrieved September 12 2013 Strada McCarl Center for Nontraditional Student Success Strada LLC Archived from the original on February 1 2008 Retrieved August 2 2010 a b About the McCarl Center College of General Studies University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved August 2 2010 Secrets of the Cathedral From 38 on down University Times Vol 36 no 2 University of Pittsburgh September 11 2003 Archived from the original on July 20 2011 Retrieved August 1 2010 Memorial Room is Dedicated in Pitt Ceremony The Pittsburgh Press December 22 1942 p 27 Retrieved August 22 2014 Media Enhanced Classrooms Cathedral of Learning Room 204 University of Pittsburgh Center for Instructional Development amp Distance Education Archived from the original on July 10 2010 Retrieved August 22 2014 Lohstoeter Lotte Olga March 1943 The Justus Mulert Memorial Room The Alumni Review 10 Archived from the original on February 10 2016 Retrieved August 22 2014 Pitt Dedicates Mulert Room Pittsburgh Post Gazette December 22 1942 p 12 Retrieved May 26 2009 permanent dead link Performance Spaces Department of Theatre Arts University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on December 2 2009 Retrieved August 2 2010 Alumnus Gifts 1 Million to Theatre Arts Press release University of Pittsburgh July 28 2017 Retrieved July 28 2017 University Honors College University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 2 2010 About UHC Architecture University Honors College University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on June 9 2010 Retrieved August 2 2010 Barlow Kimberly K December 4 2008 Making Pitt Work Josh Cochran University Times Vol 41 no 8 Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 1 2010 Steele Bruce March 22 2001 Plans call for a cooler and less congested Cathedral of Learning University Times University of Pittsburgh Archived from the original on September 20 2006 Retrieved August 2 2010 Erdley Debra March 5 2014 Going up Pitt OKs elevator upgrade at Cathedral of Learning TribLIVE Retrieved March 12 2016 Sciullo Maria October 18 2009 Pittsburgh s profile rising in video games Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh PA Retrieved October 18 2009 Leff Amanda April 14 2008 Cathedral of Learning to Be Featured April 16 on Travel Channel s Made In America Pitt Chronicle University of Pittsburgh Retrieved August 2 2010 Pittsburgh 15 bonnes raisons d aller a Evasion tv 2012 Retrieved February 5 2013 Bruhns E Maxine ed Fall 2012 Events PDF Nationality Rooms Newsletter 92 8 Retrieved February 5 2013 a b Rosengarten Richard Secrets of the Cathedral PDF The Original Magazine 4 50 Archived from the original PDF on December 29 2009 a b c Steele Bruce March 8 2001 Lights camera action Mothman invades Pitt campus University Times Vol 33 no 13 Retrieved June 30 2011 Joseph Gar April 12 2013 42 offers stadium nostalgia Philadelphia Daily News Retrieved May 9 2013 Owen Rob October 28 2008 City sets the scene for sorority thriller Pittsburgh Post Gazette Pittsburgh PA Archived from the original on June 28 2011 Retrieved September 15 2009 Free Preview Angles in the Outfield 1951 Amazon Retrieved October 28 2009 Smithsonian American Art Museum Harry W Scheuch Smithsonian Institution Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved May 31 2009 Art Reviews Felix de la Concha finds every day s a good day for painting old post gazette com Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 2 2022 Walkabout Painting as an act of devotion old post gazette com Archived from the original on December 2 2022 Retrieved December 2 2022 Mangin Brad October 26 2010 The 10 Greatest World Series Photos of All Time Photoshelter Archived from the original on October 30 2010 Retrieved March 29 2011 LIFE s Best Baseball Pictures Above It All Time Retrieved March 29 2010 Emporis com Cathedral of Learning Bangkok Emporis Retrieved May 5 2009 dead link Further reading editAlberts Robert C 1986 Pitt the story of the University of Pittsburgh 1787 1987 University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0 8229 1150 0 Bowman John G 1963 Unofficial notes Brown Mark McCullough 1987 The Cathedral of Learning concept design construction University Art Gallery Henry Clay Frick Fine Arts Building University of Pittsburgh Starrett Agnes Lynch 1938 The Darlington Memorial Library University of Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press Nationality Rooms Guide Training MaterialExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Cathedral of Learning Cathedral of Learning Virtual Tour History of the Cathedral of Learning Nationality Rooms homepage Nationality Rooms Virtual TourPanoramas 360 panorama of the Cathedral 360 panorama of the Commons Room 180 panorama Gigapan of the Commons Room Gigapan of the Cathedral s Commons Room Gigapan of the Austrian Nationality Room Gigapan from the 36th floor of the Cathedral Gigapan of a somewhat squished front of the Cathedral of LearningVideo Cathedral of Learning feature on John Ratzenberger s Made in America WQED OnQ Pitt Preservation Project Cathedral of Learning WQED OnQ E Maxine Bruhns amp The Nationality Rooms Nature Footage Aerial Of University Of Pittsburgh Cathedral Of Learning Post Gazette com The Cathedral of Learning s Peregrine falcon chicksPreceded byBellefield Hall University of Pittsburgh BuildingsCathedral of LearningConstructed 1926 1937 Succeeded byFalk SchoolPreceded by525 William Penn Place Pittsburgh Skyscrapers by Height535 feet 163 m 42 floors Succeeded byTower at PNC PlazaPreceded byGulf Tower Pittsburgh Skyscrapers by Year of Completion1936 Succeeded by525 William Penn Place Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cathedral of Learning amp oldid 1206695111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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