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Wikipedia

Pratt Institute

Pratt Institute is a private university with its main campus in Brooklyn, New York. It has a satellite campus in Manhattan and an extension campus in Utica, New York at the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute.[7] The school was founded in 1887 with programs primarily in engineering, architecture, and fine arts.[8] Comprising six schools, the institute is primarily known for its programs in architecture, graphic design, interior design, and industrial design.[9]

Pratt Institute
Pratt Institute Seal
MottoBe true to your work, and your work will be true to you.
TypePrivate university
Established1887 (136 years ago) (1887)
FounderCharles Pratt
Endowment$224.5 million (2020)[1]
PresidentFrances Bronet[2]
Academic staff
163 (full-time)
992 (part-time)[3]
Students5,137 (Fall 2021)[4]
Undergraduates3,675 (Fall 2021)[4]
Postgraduates1,462 (Fall 2021)[4]
Location, ,
11205
,
United States

40°41′28″N 73°57′50″W / 40.691111°N 73.963889°W / 40.691111; -73.963889Coordinates: 40°41′28″N 73°57′50″W / 40.691111°N 73.963889°W / 40.691111; -73.963889
CampusLarge City, Urban, 25 acres (10.1 ha)
ColorsBlack, White and Yellow[5]
     
NicknameCannoneers
Sporting affiliations
ACAA (NCAA Division III)
HVAC (USCAA)
MascotCharlie the Cannoneer [6]
Websitewww.pratt.edu

History

Inception

 
Charles Pratt, founder of Pratt Institute

Pratt Institute was founded in 1887 by American industrialist Charles Pratt, who was a successful businessman and oil tycoon and was one of the wealthiest men in the history of Brooklyn. Pratt was an early pioneer of the oil industry in the United States and was the founder of Astral Oil Works based in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn which was a leader in replacing whale oil with petroleum or natural oil. In 1867, Pratt established Charles Pratt and Company. In 1874, Pratt's companies amalgamated with John D. Rockefeller's companies and became part of the Standard Oil trust where Pratt continued his active involvement on the board and the running of it.

Pratt, an advocate of education, wanted to provide the opportunity for working men and women to better their lives through education. Even though Pratt never had the opportunity to go to college himself, he wanted to create an affordable college accessible to the working class. In 1884, Pratt began purchasing parcels of land in his affluent home town of Clinton Hill for the intention of opening a school. The school would end up being built only two blocks from Charles Pratt's residence on Clinton Avenue.

From his fortunes with Astral Oil and Charles Pratt and Company, in 1886 he endowed and founded Pratt Institute. In May 1887, the New York State Legislature granted Charles Pratt a charter to open the school; on October 17, 1887, the institute opened to 12 students in the Main Hall. Tuition was $4 per class per term (approximately equivalent to $120.6 in 2021).[10] The college was one of the first in the country open to all people, regardless of class, color, and gender. In the early years, the institute's mission was to offer education to those who never had it offered to them before. Pratt sought to teach people skills that would allow them to be successful and work their way up the economic ladder. Specifically, many programs were tailored for the growing need to train industrial workers in the changing economy with training in design and engineering. Early programs sought to teach students a variety of subjects such as architectural engineering, mechanics, dressmaking, and furniture making. Graduates of the school were taught to become engineers, mechanics, and technicians. Drawing, whether freehand, mechanical, or architectural, thought of as being a universal language, united such diverse programs and thus all programs in the school had a strong foundation in drawing. In addition, the curriculum at the institute was to be complemented by a large Liberal Arts curriculum. Students studied subjects such as history, mathematics, physics, and literature in order to better understand the world in which they will be working in, which is still used in Pratt's curriculum.[10]

Early years

 
Pratt Institute Kindergarten, 1905

Enrollment grew steadily since inception. Six months after opening, the school had an enrollment of nearly 600 students. By the first anniversary of the school there were 1,000 students in attendance. In five years' time the school had nearly 4,000 students.[10] In 1888, Scientific American said of the school that "it is undoubtedly the most important enterprise of its kind in this country, if not in the world".[10] Andrew Carnegie visited Pratt for inspiration and used the school as a model in developing Carnegie Technical Schools, now Carnegie Mellon University.[11] At the first Founder's Day celebration in 1888, Charles Pratt addressed what would become the school's motto: "be true to your work and your work will be true to you" - meaning that students should educate and develop themselves diligently and go out into the world working hard, giving all of themselves.

As public interest grew in the school and demand increased, the school began adding new programs including the Pratt High School, Library School, Music Department, and Department of Commerce.[12] Because of the overwhelming popularity of the Department of Commerce, the department broke off from the main institute and formed its own school, under the guidance of Norman P. Heffley, personal secretary to Charles Pratt.[13][14] The Heffley School of Commerce, the former Pratt Department of Commerce, originally having shared facilities with Pratt, evolved into what is now Brooklyn Law School.[15]

In 1891, the institute's founder and first president, Charles Pratt, died and his eldest son, Charles Millard Pratt, assumed responsibility of president for the school. In 1893, Charles Pratt's other son, Frederic B. Pratt, was elected President of Pratt Institute taking over from his elder brother. Because Charles Pratt Snr. died so soon after the college was founded, Frederic Pratt is ascribed with guiding the college through its early decades.[16] Under the direction of Pratt's sons, the institute was able to thrive both financially and critically with many new construction projects and courses. By 1892, the number of students enrolled was 3,900. In 1897 the most popular major for students was domestic arts.[17]

In 1896, the school opened its monumental Victorian-Renaissance Revival library with interiors designed by the Tiffany Decorating and Glass Company and sprawling gardens outside the library. The library was available not just for students, but to the general public as well. The Pratt Institute Library was the first and only public library in Brooklyn for nearly 15 years. Additionally, the library served as a working classroom for the training of librarians and is cited as one of the first schools of Library science. The Pratt Institute Library also made available the first reading room for children in New York City.[18]

By the turn of the century, The School of Science and Technology had become Pratt's most prestigious and well known school and it constituted most of the school's enrollment[19][20] Across from East Building on Grand Avenue, the institute constructed a new quad dedicated specifically for the engineering school. Constructed over a period of a quarter of a century, the Chemistry, Machinery, and Engineering buildings were constructed in the same architecture style, unifying all disciplines offered by the School. Pratt also had a large variety of courses dedicated specifically for women during this time. Some of the 25 courses women could partake in included library science, nursing, home economics, and fashion.[19]

By 1910, all of the departments of the institute were organized as individual schools including the Library School, School of Domestic Science, School of Fine and Applied Arts, and the School of Science and Technology.[19]

Degree-granting status and increase in enrollment

 
World War One Memorial in the Rose Garden

As World War I faced the nation in 1914, Pratt partnered with the United States Government to aid in the war effort. The School of Science and Technology had its own Student Army Training Corps which taught enlistees engineering skills needed for the war. Students designed aircraft used in the war and trained operators. In 1927, mechanical engineering alumnus Donald A. Hall designed the Spirit of Saint Louis, used by Charles Lindbergh in the world's first transatlantic flight.[21]

By the 1938 most programs at the school began offering four-year Bachelor of Science degrees and Pratt transformed itself from being a technical school to a rigorous college .[22] By granting bachelor's degrees, Pratt had to revise its curriculum from being a two-year school to now being a four-year college. The changes also reflected New York State requirements for granting degrees and stricter government and professional licensing regulations for graduates. During this decade, the foundation program for all Art School students was also founded.[19] In 1940 Pratt began granting graduate degrees.[22]

During World War II Pratt also helped in the war effort as it did during World War I with the engineering school training servicemen before they were deployed. Students helped to design camouflage for soldiers, buildings, and weapons. Following the war, the school saw a large influx of veterans enrolling as part of the GI Bill.

In the 1940s, the School of Science and Technology changed its name to the School of Engineering and in 1946 established its own honor society with mechanical engineering being the most popular major at all of Pratt.[17] In 1953, Francis H. Horn became the first President of Pratt who was not a member of the Pratt family. Enrollment continued to climb throughout the decade and in 1948 the institute reached an all-time high in attendance with 6,000 students.[17] By 1950, Pratt had become an accredited institution by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.[12] In 1954, the architecture department split from the Engineering School to become its own school.[19]

Campus reorganization

 
DeKalb Avenue Gate of Enclosed Campus

As part of white flight in the 1950s and 1960s which affected the majority of New York City the neighborhood of Clinton Hill began to see a transformation from an upper-class, affluent, white community to one chiefly populated by poor and working-class people of color. During this time, Pratt considered moving its campus to more affluent Long Island or Manhattan and increase its attractiveness but decided to stay at its original Brooklyn campus due to the history and Charles Pratt's original mission.[19]

As part of Robert Moses' plan for urban renewal in New York City, Pratt's physical campus saw the greatest amount of change in its history. Prior to the 1950s, the school was located in separate buildings located on several public streets. However, after Moses' clearance of many of the structures located between Pratt's buildings, the land was given over to the school, and a true campus was established. Ryerson Street, Grand Avenue, Steuben Street, and Emerson Place ceased to allow automobile traffic, and the campus became enclosed, forming the Grand Mall to connect the institute's buildings.[23] The elevated train running along Grand Avenue between the East Building/Student Union and the Engineering Quad was dismantled. As a result of new real estate, the school was able to build several new structures, all designed by the firm of McKim, Mead & White, including men's and women's dormitories and a new student union.[24] In addition, Moses' construction projects around the school helped to build the School of Architecture. Research funds were granted to the school to help discover new building techniques. By 1963, the urban planning department formed the Pratt Center for Community Development in an attempt to revitalize Pratt's surrounding neighborhood and Brooklyn.[25]

Enrollment decline and financial issues

In the 1970s and continuing well into the 1980s New York City and Brooklyn still faced large amounts of crime and poverty and as a result enrollment fell and the school began to face a budget deficit. Prospective students and faculty felt uneasy about the safety of the campus and community. In 1974, the men's basketball team came to the attention of national media outlets as Cyndi Meserve joined the team becoming the first woman to play men's NCAA basketball.[26][27] Students earning architecture degrees exceeded those who were earning mechanical engineering degrees in 1975 and architecture degrees became the most popular degree at Pratt, a trend that still exists.[17] In anticipation of the institute's centennial anniversary in 1987, several capital improvements were made to the campus trying to restore the condition of many of the dilapidated buildings. The Grand Mall was re-landscaped with new plantings, brick pathways, and lighting and the Newman Amphitheater was built in 1988 in celebration of the hundredth anniversary. President Richardson Pratt Jr retired in 1990 after nearly twenty years of serving as president, becoming the last president to be a descendant of founder Charles Pratt.

By 1993, Thomas F. Schutte was appointed as president and has since become the longest standing president overseeing the institute not a part of the Pratt family. In the same year, Pratt controversially closed its School of Engineering, an integral part of founder Charles Pratt's long-term vision for the school. Historically, the school was Pratt's most successful school and many associated the school with its engineering program.[19] In response to the institute-wide decrease in enrollment and school-wide budget issues, closing the School of Engineering was thought of as being the only feasible option to keep the school's other programs afloat and to address the budget. Students in the Engineering program were transferred to Polytechnic Institute of New York University while tenured professors were relocated to the School of Architecture and the science and math departments in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences.[28]

Revitalization and growth

As a result of closing the costly School of Engineering, the school was able to get out of debt and on the track to financial success. Funds were allocated for campus-wide beautification projects and restoration and modernization of historic buildings, starting with Memorial Hall. Part of the beautification projects included adding the Pratt Institute Sculpture Park in 1999 where contemporary art sculptures are placed throughout the campus lawns and gardens, making it the largest contemporary sculpture park in New York City.[29] Pratt also began a partnership with Munson-Williams-Proctor and Delaware College of Art and Design for art students to study for two years at either campus and finish their degrees at Pratt's School of Art and Design in Brooklyn. During the 1990s the school was able to increase enrollment by twenty-five percent, from approximately 3,000 students in 1990 to 4,000 students in 2000.[19]

Vincent A. Stabile, a 1940 graduate of the School of Engineering, donated about $13 million to Pratt, the largest donation made by any alumnus in the college's history,[19] with the request to President Schutte that the donation be used to reopen the School of Engineering. President Schutte rejected Mr. Stabile's request but instead allocated the funds to construct a new residence hall named in the donor's honor. From the mid-1980s to the 2000s Pratt experienced the transition from being mainly a commuter school to become a residential school through the construction of new residence halls Cannoneer Court, Pantas Hall, and Stabile Hall.

Presidents

  1. Charles Pratt (1830–1891), president from 1887 to 1891
  2. Charles Millard Pratt (1855–1935), 1891–1893
  3. Frederic B. Pratt (1865–1945), 1893–1937
  4. Charles Pratt (1892–?), 1937–1953
  5. Francis H. Horn 1953–1957
  6. Robert Fisher Oxnam (1915–1974), 1957–1960
  7. Richard H. Heindel 1961-1967
  8. James B. Donovan (1916–1970), 1968–1970
  9. Henry Saltzman, 1970-1972
  10. Richardson Pratt Jr (1923–2001) (grandson of Charles Millard Pratt and great-grandson of Charles Pratt), 1972–1990
  11. Warren F. Ilchman (1933–), 1990–1993
  12. Thomas F. Schutte (1936–), 1993–2017
  13. Frances Bronet, 2018–present

Academics

Rankings

Pratt Institute is currently unranked by U.S. News & World Report.[32] In its specialty rankings, U.S. News & World Report ranks Pratt 8th among "Best Fine Arts Programs" and 34th in "Best Library and Information Studies Programs".[32] The Bachelor of Architecture program has been ranked as being in the top fifteen programs in the United States consistently since 2000 according to Architectural Record.[33] Bloomberg BusinessWeek ranked the school as being one of the top 60 schools in the world to study design,[34] and respondents to a Business Insider survey said that the school was the 6th-best school for design in the world.[35]

While Kiplinger's Personal Finance previously named Pratt as one of the country's best values in private colleges and universities, it is no longer listed in their rankings.[36] It was previously included as one of the top values for academic quality and affordability out of more than 600 private institutions.

In 2021, Pratt Institute was ranked the ninth globally according to the QS World University Rankings by the subject Art and Design.[37]

Schools and academic divisions

 
Higgins Hall main façade of the School of Architecture

Pratt Institute is divided into 6 schools and more than 28 departments and divisions offering over 22 undergraduate majors and 25 graduate majors. The schools include:

  • School of Architecture
    • Department of Undergraduate Architecture
    • Department of Construction Management, Facilities Management, and Real Estate Practice
    • Department of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design
    • Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment
  • School of Art
    • Department of Art and Design Education
    • Department of Arts and Cultural Management
    • Department of Creative Arts Therapy
    • Department of Digital Arts and Animation
    • Department of Design Management
    • Department of Film and Video
    • Department of Fine Arts
    • Department of Photography
    • Department of Associate Degrees
  • School of Design
    • Department of Undergraduate Communications Design
    • Department of Graduate Communications Design
    • Department of Fashion Design
    • Department of Industrial Design
    • Department of Interior Design
  • School of Liberal Arts and Sciences
    • Department of Humanities and Media Studies
    • Department of the History of Art and Design
    • Department of Math and Science
    • Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies
       
      Hall Street pedestrian entrance
    • Department of Writing
    • Department of General Education
    • Intensive English Program
  • School of Information (Pratt has the oldest continuously accredited library-science program in the United States.)
  • School of Continuing and Professional Studies

Former schools

  • School of Domestic Arts and Sciences
  • School of Engineering

Joint degree programs

Pratt Institute offers the following joint degree programs:[38]

  • J.D./Master in City and Regional Planning: Brooklyn Law School and Pratt Institute jointly sponsor a program leading to the degrees of Juris Doctor (J.D.) and Master of Science (M.S.) in City and Regional Planning.

Accreditation

Pratt Institute is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools and is authorized to award academic degrees by the State of New York, following guidelines established by the New York State Department of Education.[39]

The Bachelor of Architecture degree and the Master of Architecture degree at the School of Architecture are accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board.[40] The undergraduate Interior Design program is accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation.[41]

Graduate programs in Library and Information Science, Art Therapy, and Art Education are all accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of the American Library Association, Education Approval Board of the American Art Therapy Association, and RATE respectively.[39] The School of Art and Design is one of only forty-three schools part of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design.[42]

Demographics

Ethnic composition of undergraduates 2018-19[43]
Undergrads U.S. Census[44]
White (non-Hispanic) 35.4% 60.4%
African-American 3.4% 13.4%
Asian American 13.2% 5.9%
Native American 0.1% 1.3%
Hispanic American (of any race) 9.5% 18.3%
Two or more races, non-Hispanic 3.5% 2.7%
International students 34.0% (N/A)
Unknown 1.0% (N/A)

Pratt Institute students, numbering 3,483 undergraduates and 1,392 graduate students in Fall 2019, come from 78 countries and 47 states.[43] Women represent 71% of undergraduates and 74% of graduate students.[43]

Brooklyn campus

 
Cannon Court
 
Main Building as viewed from Rose Garden

Pratt Institute's main campus is located on a historic, esteemed,[45] enclosed 25-acre (100,000 m2) campus located in the Clinton Hill neighborhood in Brooklyn, 2 miles from Downtown Brooklyn and 3 miles from Lower Manhattan. Midtown Manhattan is just 5 miles from the campus.

The campus is accessible by two public entrances, both of which close in the evening hours and are guarded by security 24 hours a day. The main gate located at Willoughby Avenue on the north side of campus is accessible for pedestrians and vehicles while the secondary pedestrian-only gate located at the corner of Hall Street and DeKalb Avenue at the southwest part of campus is convenient for commuters and for students to get to Higgins Hall. In addition, there are three other swipe card access gates available only for student use. The campus is very park-like and fully landscaped and provides a stark contrast to the urban neighborhood which surrounds the school.

The four main areas of the campus include the Library Rose Garden, Cannon Court, Newman Mall and Amphitheater, and the Engineering Quad:

  • The historically significant Rose Garden is located directly north of the library and was built as a part of the library acting as a public park. At the center of the garden is a 1926 World War I memorial flagpole detailed with eagles, male, and female busts.[46]
  • The Cannon Court is located directly south of the library and serves as the main entrance from the Hall Street gate. A central feature of the court is a large bronze Spanish cannon from 1720 originally from Seville, Spain and brought to Pratt from Morro Castle in Havana, Cuba in 1899.[24] Trees and meandering pathways lead to the library and Newman Mall.
  • The Newman Mall takes up the center of the campus with many of the academic buildings alongside the mall. The mall is characterized by brick pathways with mature trees lining a central lawn. To the north of the mall is a small amphitheater, designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill.[47]
  • The Engineering Quadrangle, which is recognized as a historic landmark, is located north of the Newman Mall toward the eastern side of campus with the Chemistry, Machinery, and Engineering buildings enclosing the quad which has terraced landscaping and gardens with many mature trees.

The entire campus is open to the public as park space during the daytime. Throughout the campus, many contemporary sculptures fill the gardens and landscape, making the campus home to the largest sculpture park in New York City.[29] The sculptures are loaned to Pratt and are changed on a rotating basis. Public Art Review recognized the campus as having one of the 10 best college and university art collections in the country.[48]

List of sculptures on campus

[49][50]

Displayed since Name of Sculpture Artist
2016 La Méditerranée Philippe Anthonioz
1981 Accord Final Arman
1999 Picnic Table Siah Armajani
1993 Leaf Ilan Averbuch
2005 The Book of Stone and Steel
2011 Maze 1 Phyllis Baker Hammond
1995 Image 95 Masaru Bando
2014 Whispering Bench— Texting, Cathey Billian
1995 Wind Reeds Bill & Mary Buchen
2007 Seven of Hearts Noël Copeland
2009 Brooklyn Blooms
2013 Half Story Mountain Grayson Cox
2002 Jive Mark di Suvero
2013 Learning Anne Gillen
1988-1993 Leucantha, Philip Grausman
2004 Epistrophy, Straight No Chaser, Round Midnight Richard Heinrich
2005 Skylark David Henderson
2009 Silo Tomasz Jan Groza
2001 Fourth Dimension Ann Jon
2008 Segmented Flower Form Part 1 Mary Judge
2011 24M Michael Kalish
2001 Lions at the Gate Wendy Klemperer
1990-1999 6 Copper Spheres Grace Knowlton
2003 Saratoga Winter Harry E. Leigh
1996 F.R.S.B. Donald Lipski
2000 Uplifting Sandy Macleod
1979 Untitled Michael Malpass
1988 Zinnia
1979 Tool Ball
1986 Trilogy (square)
2012 Ascent Jackson Martin
2008-2009 Waiting for Coyote Nao Matsumoto
1996 Manhole Covers Brad Michael McCallum
2007 Pratt Pillows Mark Mennin
2007 Untitled Sung Ha No
Date unknown Promise Neil Noland
Date unknown Spinoff
2011 Sun Avital Oz
2006 Object/Product Mark Parsons
2012 Double Sbalzo Beverly Pepper
2006 Ecstasy Nova Mihai Popa
2004 Aerated Rectangles Salvatore M. Romano
2009-2010 Five Equal Volumes
Date unknown Untitled Tony Rosenthal
2007 Four Floating Disks G.A. Ruda
2004 Particle/Wave,Time/Space Continuum Karl Saliter
2006 Dream of Africa Shin Sang-Ho
2012 Scarce of Fishing Arden Scott
1990 Chair Alan Siegel
2014 Intersections: Gardens #4 #5 #6 #7 #8 #9 Arlene Slavin
2007 Block 700 Sean Slemon
2001 Guardian Leon Smith
2004 Red Cabinet
2002 Triangle
2006 Black E.C. Tower Kenneth Snelson
2003 Silent Beam Takashi Soga
2000 Siting on His Laurels Dana L. Stewart
Date Unknown Bench George Sugarman
Date Unknown Right Angles Gunnar Theel
2012 Brickhead: Yemanga James Tyler
Date Unknown Three Cement Goats Unknown Artist
2002 Mier Boaz Vaadia
2002 Sara
2002 Rebecca
2006 Ode to Miles Davis Hans Van de Bovenkamp
1974 Undulation
2009 The End Justifies the Means, Justifies the End ... Martha Walker
2012 Pratt Desk Allan Wexler
1979 Swirl Jack Youngerman
1981 Wave
1971 Blade
2006 Welcome II Raphael Zollinger

Buildings

Pratt is home to a diverse collection of buildings composed of several architectural styles. Most of the buildings at the school were built before World War II in the style of Romanesque Revival, Victorian, and Neoclassical styles and were designed by prominent nineteenth and twentieth century architects. After the war, Pratt began building more contemporary styled buildings.

In 2011, Architectural Digest named Pratt as being one of the top ten most architecturally significant college campuses in the country, for its seamless collection of buildings ranging from since the 1800s.[45]

The Main Building, East Hall Building, and Student Union are all located adjacent to one another and make up a complex of the original buildings, all built specifically for the Institute in 1887:

  • Located at the north-central part of campus, the Main Building is a six-story Romanesque Revival brick building designed by Lamb and Rich and was the first building to open at the school.[12] The roof features an iconic clock tower, which overlooks the Rose Garden. The building houses administrative offices, classrooms, and art studios for the Arts Department of the School of Art and Design. In February 2013 a fire erupted throughout the top floors of the building, destroying much of the interior structure and students work.[51]
  • East Hall is located directly behind Main Hall and faces Grand Walk. Designed by William Windrim, a main feature of the brick building is the large smokestack which served the institute's power generation plant. Within the Hall are a variety of services for students including Career Services, Student Activities, International Student Affairs, and the Pratt Chapel. Located in the lower level of the building is Pratt's continuously operating, privately owned, steam-powered electrical generating plant built originally to serve the power needs of the school. In 1977 the facility was recognized by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and named a National Mechanical Engineering Landmark.[52]
  • The Student Union, by architect William Tubby, was originally built as the Trade School building but soon after completion was completely remodeled as the Student Union complete with gymnasium and swimming pool. In 1982 the building was renovated again as the new Student Union.[24] All three buildings wrap around an interior courtyard which connects out to the Newman Mall and Library Rose Garden. The centerpiece of the courtyard is a 17th-century Italian marble well-head fountain purchased by the Pratt family in 1900.[24]

Other structures include:

  • South Hall, located along Reyerson Walk to the direct south of Main Building, was finished in 1892 by William Tubby and was built as the Pratt High School.[53] When the high school closed near the turn-of-the-century, the building was used for the School of Domestic Arts and Sciences. The building is now home to classrooms, studios, and offices for programs in the Department of Fine Arts, part of the School of Art and Design.
  • Pratt Institute Library, which was opened in 1888 to serve students and the general public as well, became the first free Public Library in Brooklyn. The architect of the building was William Tubby of Brooklyn. The decoration in the building was done by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company.
  • The Chemistry, Machinery, and Engineering Buildings are located across from Grand Walk and East Building, which are clustered around the Engineering Quad's lawn and gardens. They were built in phases between 1908 and 1928 and designed by architecture firm Howells & Stokes .[12] These buildings originally housed courses for Pratt's School of Engineering until it was dismantled in 1993. The machinery building houses, a Print lab, Metal Shop, Ceramics Studios and WoodShop. The second floor of the Engineering building now houses Pratt's largest computer lab on campus, with several classrooms of Mac and PC workstations and a collection of scanners, printers, and plotters. The basement houses Pratt's Material Lab and Center for Sustainable Design Strategies.
  • The school's auditorium, Memorial Hall, was built in 1927 with John Mead Howells serving as the architect. It is located across from the Rose Garden along Reyerson Walk, between the Main Building and North Hall.
  • Built as part of the urban renewal project led by Robert Moses, North Hall is located directly north of Memorial Hall and was designed by McKim, Mead, and White in 1958.[24] The building houses Pratt's Main cafeteria and the school's bank. Classrooms for the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences are located on the upper levels of the building.
  • DeKalb Hall and the Information Science Center were also designed by McKim, Mead, and White earlier in 1955. They originally served as men's and women's dormitories respectively until Pratt acquired Willoughby Hall.[24] After the acquisition of Willoughby, the buildings were remodeled to serve classroom and administrative needs. DeKalb Hall, located to the far west of campus and south of the Library and Cannon Court, is home to administrative offices. The Information Science Center is also located to the far west of campus, but north of the Library and Rose Garden, which was home to the School of Information.
  • The Juliana Curran Terian Design Center is made up of two separate wings, Steuben Hall to the east and Pratt Studios west, which hold all of Pratt's design programs. Located at the southern edge of the campus between Pantas Hall and the Athletics and Recreation Center, this building is home to the Interior Design, Industrial Design, Communication Design, and Fashion Design Departments, as well as the givetake art supply recycling initiative. At the center of the building there is a small courtyard. Originally the center was two separate buildings that were acquired by Pratt in 1962 and 1970, respectively.[12] The buildings were originally built around the turn-of-the-century and served as factories until Pratt acquired them. A new glass and metal entry pavilion, named in honor of architecture alumni and donor Juliana Curran Terian, was constructed in 2007[54] and was designed to the two original, separate, brick buildings. The lead architect for the project was the School of Architecture's Dean, Thomas Hanrahan.[54]
  • Myrtle Hall is Pratt's newest building, having opened in 2010. The building, located one block north of campus, was designed by Pratt Institute School of Architecture alumnus Jack Esterson AIA of the New York City architecture and engineering firm WASA/Studio A, and has achieved LEED Gold Certification. The building houses Student Services (registrar, bursar, and financial aid), Admissions, the Pratt Center for Community Development, and the Digital Art Center.
  • The Caroline Ladd Pratt House is owned by the school. It is used as the college president's mansion and for gala events.[55] It was completed in 1898 and designed by architects Babb, Cook, and Willard for Frederic B. Pratt, the institute's third president, the son of Charles Pratt (and family). It is located two blocks west of the school on Clinton Avenue, near the other Pratt family mansions.
  • Higgins Hall, located one block south of the main campus, houses the entire School of Architecture with the exception of Construction Management programs. The historic Romanesque Revival landmark building with a contemporary center wing houses the school's Administrative Offices, computer labs, student classrooms and laboratories, a lecture hall, a small café, and the Hazel and Robert H. Siegel Gallery. The building was originally built for the prestigious Adelphi Academy, now Adelphi University in phases from 1868 through 1890 by Mundell and Teckritz and Charles C. Haight. Charles Pratt also partially funded construction of the building as part of his philanthropic efforts.[56] The building was given to Pratt Institute in 1965 by the wife of John Higgins, architect and alumni of Adelphi Academy. The School of Architecture was relocated here.[57] In 1996, the building experienced a major fire, destroying the center wing of the building and severely damaging the northern and southern wings.[58] In 2005, the school replaced the center wing with a new sleek and contemporary glass structure, which linked historic brick northern and southern wings designed by Steven Holl, and incorporated complementary contrast to the original essence.[59] As part of the rebuilding of Higgins Hall, Rogers Marvel Architects restored and renovated the original nineteenth century wings to their former glory.[60]

Historic sites

Pratt Institute Historic District
 
 
 
 
 
 
LocationRoughly bounded by Hall St., Dekalb Ave., Willoughby St. and Emerson Pl., Brooklyn, New York
Area9 acres (3.6 ha)
ArchitectMultiple
Architectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Renaissance, Romanesque
NRHP reference No.90001138 [61]
Added to NRHPMarch 23, 2005

A number of Pratt Institute's buildings and landscapes are historically significant. The Pratt Institute Historic District is a national historic district that comprises 10 contributing buildings built between 1885 and 1936. Several buildings are recognized as being New York City Designated Landmarks. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005[61] and was awarded the Getty Foundation Campus Heritage Grant.[62] Two buildings outside the historic district, Higgins Hall and the Caroline Ladd Pratt House are also listed on the historic register as being a part of the Clinton Hill Historic District. The buildings and structures listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places for their architectural or historical significance are:[12]

  • Engineering Quadrangle
  • Higgins Hall
  • Machinery Building
  • Main Building
  • Main Building Courtyard
  • Memorial Hall
  • Pratt Institute Library
  • Pratt Institute Library Rose Garden
  • South Hall
  • Student Union

Residence halls

Pratt, a residential campus, offers seven different residence options for its students. All residence hall students are provided with a bed (twin extra-long), a desk, a chair and a dresser. Students residing in a dorm without in unit kitchens are required to be on a mandatory meal plan (Stabile, Emerson, ELJ, and Pantas), while those with in unit kitchens are able to sign up for an optional meal plan (Willoughby and Grand Avenue). Emerson Place, Leo J. Pantas Hall, and Vincent A. Stabile Hall are the primary freshman dorms. In total, 51 percent of undergraduate students reside on campus while 92 percent of incoming freshmen students reside on campus.[63] Pratt offers the following residence halls for students to choose from:

  • Esther Lloyd-Jones Hall is named for a trendsetter in modern American higher education.[64] The building was originally a private apartment building built in 1921 but was acquired by Pratt in 1964 as use for dormitories. ELJ accommodates students single and double rooms in apartment-style accommodations. ELJ is occupied primarily by upperclassmen continuing students.
  • Emerson Hall is the newest dorm on the Pratt campus, opening Fall 2019. It was built specifically to be a freshman dorm. It was collaboratively designed by CannonDesign and Hanrahan Meyers Architects with intention of encouraging interaction.[65] The dorm is off campus, across the street from the Film and Video Building. The dorm contains double rooms, with several individual bathrooms and separate, individual shower rooms on each floor to be shared by those inhabiting each floor. Each floor also contains a large central common space with a small kitchen on each floor.
  • Leo J. Pantas Hall was opened in 1987 and designed by Skidmore, Owings and Merrill and sits centrally located on campus. Students live in four-person suites, which consist of two double rooms (two people in each double room), and each suite has its own bathroom. Suites are single sex, but floors are co-ed. The building boasts a work/study rooms and communal lounges. The building was design in brick with a clock tower, echoing the style of original 1887 Main Building. Pantas is primarily a freshmen residence hall.
 
The historic Pratt Townhouses
  • Vincent A. Stabile Hall opened in the Fall of 1999 and designed by Pasanella+Klein, Stolzman+Berg Architects. Named for the donor and graduate of the Engineering School, it was designed for new undergraduate students. It houses 240 students in four-person suites. Each suite consists of two double rooms with a shared bath. There are kitchenettes located on each floor. Stabile is primarily a freshmen residence hall.
  • The Pratt Townhouses are historic landmarks which were originally constructed from 1901 to 1910 in the colonial revival style to serve as faculty housing. The townhomes were designed by Hobart C. Walker. After being neglected for several years, Pratt renovated the townhouses to be used by upperclassmen. Each unit consists of six single rooms spread across three stories, a full kitchen, living room, parlor, basement, and shared backyard.
  • Willoughby Hall is a former private apartment building built as part of Robert Moses' urban renewal projects surround Pratt, and is the largest residence hall. Built in 1957 by architect John Mead Howells, the 16-story building accommodates 800 undergraduate men and women. In addition to the standard furniture, all apartments have a kitchen table, stove, and refrigerator. All students are assigned to double, triple, or single spaces. The converted apartments consist of at least one double or triple that occupies the former living-room space of the apartment. The number of students residing in a given apartment ranges from two to six students, depending upon the size of the converted apartment—studio, one, two, or three bedroom.
  • Grand Avenue Residence is home to new and continuing graduate students. The building can accommodate 50 students in efficiency apartments (double and single) and private single rooms within two- and three-bedroom apartments. A double-efficiency apartment is two students sharing a one-room apartment (with kitchen and bath). A single-efficiency apartment is one student in a private one-room apartment with kitchen and bath. A shared single is two or more students, each with its own private bedroom, sharing kitchen, bath, and living room. The building is located one block from campus. Each living room is furnished with a sofa, club chair, coffee table, kitchen table, and chairs.

Transportation

 
The Clinton-Washington Avenues subway station of the G train is close to Pratt's Brooklyn campus

Pratt does not provide any official sponsored transportation options for its students, but there are several public transportation options located directly off Pratt's main campus.

The school is served by MTA New York City Bus routes with the B38 bus route servicing the campus to the south with stations along DeKalb and Lafayette Avenues and the B54 bus route serving the area north of the campus along Myrtle Avenue.[66] In addition, the New York City Subway's G train has one station located at the intersection of Washington and Lafayette Avenues and another located at the intersection of Classon and Lafayette Avenues. The Clinton–Washington Avenues station (IND Crosstown Line) is located directly across the street from Higgins Hall. The Classon Avenue station (IND Crosstown Line) is located one block south from the south east corner of campus. In addition, the C train has an entrance to Clinton–Washington Avenues station (IND Fulton Street Line) four blocks south of the Hall Gate entrance and three blocks south of Higgins Hall.[67]

New York City's public bike-share program, Citi Bike, has stations nearby at Lafayette Avenue and Saint James Place; at Hall Street and Willoughby Avenue; and at Emerson Place and Myrtle Avenue.[68]

The Long Island Rail Road at Atlantic Terminal, is located a short walk from the campus. Pratt participates in New Jersey Transit's University Partnership Program where students can receive a twenty-five percent discount on monthly passes based out of Penn Station in Manhattan.[69]

Pratt Manhattan

 
Pratt Manhattan

The Pratt Manhattan center, located at 144 West 14th Street, between 6th and 7th Avenue, is home to Pratt's associate degrees programs in graphic design, illustration, and digital design and interactive media, an undergraduate program in construction management, several of Pratt's graduate programs including the master's degrees in the School of Information, Facilities management, Design Management, Arts and Cultural Management, and the School of Continuing and Professional Studies which offers an array of non-credit courses and Certificate Programs, including certificates in Digital Design, Advanced Perfumery, Creative Interiors, Floral Art and Design, among many others. This seven story historic building was acquired by Pratt in 2000. The Institute restored the building's exterior to its original facade highlighting its decorative architectural and design elements and renovated the interior to feature its high ceilings and wood beams. A lovely staircase from the building's lobby leads to the Pratt Manhattan Gallery.

This new building houses the School for Information, the Graduate Programs in Design Management, Arts and cultural Management, the two-year associate degree Programs in Digital Design, Graphic Design and Illustration, and the Manhattan office of the School of Continuing and Professional Studies. The modern building has many resources like a library, computer lab and meeting spaces.

In 1974, the New York Phoenix School of Design, formerly the New York School of Applied Design for Women and the Phoenix Art Institute, merged with the Pratt Institute to form the Pratt-New York Phoenix School of Design, which offered three-year certificate programs in art and design at least into the late 1970s. It is located in the landmark New York School of Applied Design Building at 160 Lexington Avenue, at the northwest corner of Lexington and 30th Street.[70] At this time, Manhattan had long been the epicenter of publishing design during the latter-twentieth century. This new commercial-art-dedicated satellite was modeled to apply intensely concentrated vocational training in graphic design, illustration, package design, and textile design. Its faculty was largely composed of Manhattan's working professionals, who themselves had achieved the level of skill necessary to meet the city's global-defining standards. Magazines, books, music albums, movie posters, print and television advertisements and packaging for all forms of retail products were the intended goals for its graduates, as well as Manhattan's omnipresent fashion industry. In addition, the below-ground space in the school was converted into a state of the art printmaking facility, teaching artist-created lithography, silk screening and engraving.

Student life

Clubs and student organizations

As of October 2022, Pratt is home to 122 clubs with a wide range in focuses.[71] Some of these clubs include the Pratt Photo League, the Latinx Student Alliance, the Pratt Institute Botanical Society, and the Students for Socialist Revolution.[72] Clubs at Pratt don't just hold meetings, but also host on campus events and arrange exhibitions of club members' work.

Pratt Cats

Pratt institute is known for the campus' "Pratt Cats" which roam freely on campus, and inspired the schools' mascot, Charlie.[citation needed] The cats include Charlie, L'il Mama, Mustachio, Shadow, Thomas, Earl, and Benji. They have heated homes on campus, and are fed by staff and students.

Student media

Pratt has several student media groups including a Film Club.

  • The Prattler is Pratt's quarterly student magazine/newspaper, established in 1940.
  • Static Fish, a comic book publication established over 20 years ago.
  • Ubiquitous is Pratt's literary and arts magazine, published twice a year with reading event on campus per semester and also maintains a blog.[73]
  • Pratt's yearbook, Prattonia, is designed by selected Pratt students.
  • Pratt Radio, a student-run internet radio station broadcasts on the web. Originally broadcasting from a limited-range signal in the mid-1980s, the FCC stepped in and shut the operation down after students modified the broadcast tower, rendering Pratt Radio pirate radio.[citation needed] The station later re-emerged in 2001 as a legitimate internet-only station.
  • The Felt is an online journal of poetry and prose from the MFA Writing program.[74]

Fraternities and sororities

The Inter-Greek Council is responsible for all Greek life organizations at Pratt Institute. In total, Pratt offers one fraternity for male students and two sororities for female students:

Athletics

Pratt athletic teams are the Cannoneers. The institute is a member of the Division III level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), primarily competing in the Coast to Coast Athletic Conference (C2C) since the 2020–21 academic year. The Cannoneers previously competed in the American Collegiate Athletic Association (ACAA) during their exploratory status in the NCAA Division III ranks from 2018–19 to 2019–20.[75] They also competed as a founding member of the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (HVIAC) of the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) from 2004–05 to 2017–18.

Pratt competes in 15 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, track & field and volleyball; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, soccer, tennis, track & field and volleyball; and co-ed sports include equestrian.

Accomplishments

Men's basketball

The men's basketball team has a storied tradition, including the fourth-longest collegiate basketball rivalry in the nation between Pratt and Polytechnic University (Brooklyn, NY), with Pratt holding the overall record 78–59. The Cannoneers also took home a national collegiate championship title in 1901, and made four NAIA ('59, '60, '61, and '62) and two ECAC ('77,'79) post-season appearances. Former players included Ed Mazria ('62), who was drafted by the New York Knicks, and Anthony Heyward ('94), who currently tours with the And1 streetball team as "Half Man Half Amazing". Bernard Chang was formerly captain of the men's varsity basketball team.

Men's soccer

The men's soccer team won the NAIA tournament in 1959, edging Elizabethtown College 4–3 in double overtime.

Cross country

The women's cross-country team recently captured the 2006 HMWAC championship title and coach Dalton Evans won "Coach of the Year" honors. The men's cross-country team also has a championship title. The women's tennis team has won three HVWAC titles, including an appearance in the ECAC tournament.

Intramurals

In addition, there are intramural activities schedules throughout the year, ranging from individual (tennis and track & field) to team sports (soccer, basketball, volleyball, and touch football). Two premier student intramurals events include the fall classic Halloween Pratt Ratt Outdoor Obstacle Relay Race and the annual Mr. & Ms. Pratt All Thatt Fitness & Artistic Expression Pageant finale.

Others

Facilities

The Athletics Resource Center (A.R.C.) is home to the athletic department, and features the largest clear-span space in Brooklyn. It also hosts the annual Colgate Games, the nation's largest amateur track series for girls from elementary school through college.[76]

Mascot

The school's mascot, the Cannoneer, derives from the 19th century cannon that stands prominently near the main gate to the campus. Cast in bronze in Seville, Spain, the cannon bears the insignia of Philip V and was brought to Pratt from the walls of Morro Castle in Havana, Cuba, in 1899.

Notable alumni

Science, technology, and engineering

Architecture

Government, politics, and social issues

Attorney

Congressmen, government officials, and politicians

Religious leaders

Scholars

Librarians

Crime

American Red Cross

Entertainment and communications

Art and design

Industrial Design

Fashion Design

Illustration

Fine Arts

Sports

Business

Notable faculty

References

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Further reading

  • Elbert Hubbard, 1909, Little Journeys to the Homes
  • Tarbell, Ida M. 1904, The History of Standard Oil
  • Pratt Institute official Web site, History page
  • New York Times article announcing end of engineering school
  • [1]

External links

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website
  • Pratt Institute—Documentary produced by Treasures of New York
  • Historic American Engineering Record (HAER) No. NY-70, "Pratt Institute, Power Generating Plant, Willoughby Avenue between Classen & Hall Streets, Brooklyn, Kings County, NY", 2 photos, 1 data page, 1 photo caption page

pratt, institute, private, university, with, main, campus, brooklyn, york, satellite, campus, manhattan, extension, campus, utica, york, munson, williams, proctor, arts, institute, school, founded, 1887, with, programs, primarily, engineering, architecture, fi. Pratt Institute is a private university with its main campus in Brooklyn New York It has a satellite campus in Manhattan and an extension campus in Utica New York at the Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute 7 The school was founded in 1887 with programs primarily in engineering architecture and fine arts 8 Comprising six schools the institute is primarily known for its programs in architecture graphic design interior design and industrial design 9 Pratt InstitutePratt Institute SealMottoBe true to your work and your work will be true to you TypePrivate universityEstablished1887 136 years ago 1887 FounderCharles PrattEndowment 224 5 million 2020 1 PresidentFrances Bronet 2 Academic staff163 full time 992 part time 3 Students5 137 Fall 2021 4 Undergraduates3 675 Fall 2021 4 Postgraduates1 462 Fall 2021 4 LocationBrooklyn New York 11205 United States40 41 28 N 73 57 50 W 40 691111 N 73 963889 W 40 691111 73 963889 Coordinates 40 41 28 N 73 57 50 W 40 691111 N 73 963889 W 40 691111 73 963889CampusLarge City Urban 25 acres 10 1 ha ColorsBlack White and Yellow 5 NicknameCannoneersSporting affiliationsACAA NCAA Division III HVAC USCAA MascotCharlie the Cannoneer 6 Websitewww wbr pratt wbr edu Contents 1 History 1 1 Inception 1 2 Early years 1 3 Degree granting status and increase in enrollment 1 4 Campus reorganization 1 5 Enrollment decline and financial issues 1 6 Revitalization and growth 1 7 Presidents 2 Academics 2 1 Rankings 2 2 Schools and academic divisions 2 2 1 Former schools 2 3 Joint degree programs 2 4 Accreditation 2 5 Demographics 3 Brooklyn campus 3 1 List of sculptures on campus 4 Buildings 4 1 Historic sites 4 2 Residence halls 4 3 Transportation 5 Pratt Manhattan 6 Student life 6 1 Clubs and student organizations 6 2 Pratt Cats 6 3 Student media 6 4 Fraternities and sororities 7 Athletics 7 1 Accomplishments 7 1 1 Men s basketball 7 1 2 Men s soccer 7 1 3 Cross country 7 2 Intramurals 7 3 Others 7 3 1 Facilities 7 3 2 Mascot 8 Notable alumni 8 1 Science technology and engineering 8 2 Architecture 8 3 Government politics and social issues 8 4 Entertainment and communications 8 5 Art and design 8 6 Sports 8 7 Business 9 Notable faculty 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory EditInception Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Pratt Institute news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles Pratt founder of Pratt Institute Pratt Institute was founded in 1887 by American industrialist Charles Pratt who was a successful businessman and oil tycoon and was one of the wealthiest men in the history of Brooklyn Pratt was an early pioneer of the oil industry in the United States and was the founder of Astral Oil Works based in the Greenpoint section of Brooklyn which was a leader in replacing whale oil with petroleum or natural oil In 1867 Pratt established Charles Pratt and Company In 1874 Pratt s companies amalgamated with John D Rockefeller s companies and became part of the Standard Oil trust where Pratt continued his active involvement on the board and the running of it Pratt an advocate of education wanted to provide the opportunity for working men and women to better their lives through education Even though Pratt never had the opportunity to go to college himself he wanted to create an affordable college accessible to the working class In 1884 Pratt began purchasing parcels of land in his affluent home town of Clinton Hill for the intention of opening a school The school would end up being built only two blocks from Charles Pratt s residence on Clinton Avenue From his fortunes with Astral Oil and Charles Pratt and Company in 1886 he endowed and founded Pratt Institute In May 1887 the New York State Legislature granted Charles Pratt a charter to open the school on October 17 1887 the institute opened to 12 students in the Main Hall Tuition was 4 per class per term approximately equivalent to 120 6 in 2021 10 The college was one of the first in the country open to all people regardless of class color and gender In the early years the institute s mission was to offer education to those who never had it offered to them before Pratt sought to teach people skills that would allow them to be successful and work their way up the economic ladder Specifically many programs were tailored for the growing need to train industrial workers in the changing economy with training in design and engineering Early programs sought to teach students a variety of subjects such as architectural engineering mechanics dressmaking and furniture making Graduates of the school were taught to become engineers mechanics and technicians Drawing whether freehand mechanical or architectural thought of as being a universal language united such diverse programs and thus all programs in the school had a strong foundation in drawing In addition the curriculum at the institute was to be complemented by a large Liberal Arts curriculum Students studied subjects such as history mathematics physics and literature in order to better understand the world in which they will be working in which is still used in Pratt s curriculum 10 Early years Edit Pratt Institute Kindergarten 1905 Enrollment grew steadily since inception Six months after opening the school had an enrollment of nearly 600 students By the first anniversary of the school there were 1 000 students in attendance In five years time the school had nearly 4 000 students 10 In 1888 Scientific American said of the school that it is undoubtedly the most important enterprise of its kind in this country if not in the world 10 Andrew Carnegie visited Pratt for inspiration and used the school as a model in developing Carnegie Technical Schools now Carnegie Mellon University 11 At the first Founder s Day celebration in 1888 Charles Pratt addressed what would become the school s motto be true to your work and your work will be true to you meaning that students should educate and develop themselves diligently and go out into the world working hard giving all of themselves As public interest grew in the school and demand increased the school began adding new programs including the Pratt High School Library School Music Department and Department of Commerce 12 Because of the overwhelming popularity of the Department of Commerce the department broke off from the main institute and formed its own school under the guidance of Norman P Heffley personal secretary to Charles Pratt 13 14 The Heffley School of Commerce the former Pratt Department of Commerce originally having shared facilities with Pratt evolved into what is now Brooklyn Law School 15 In 1891 the institute s founder and first president Charles Pratt died and his eldest son Charles Millard Pratt assumed responsibility of president for the school In 1893 Charles Pratt s other son Frederic B Pratt was elected President of Pratt Institute taking over from his elder brother Because Charles Pratt Snr died so soon after the college was founded Frederic Pratt is ascribed with guiding the college through its early decades 16 Under the direction of Pratt s sons the institute was able to thrive both financially and critically with many new construction projects and courses By 1892 the number of students enrolled was 3 900 In 1897 the most popular major for students was domestic arts 17 In 1896 the school opened its monumental Victorian Renaissance Revival library with interiors designed by the Tiffany Decorating and Glass Company and sprawling gardens outside the library The library was available not just for students but to the general public as well The Pratt Institute Library was the first and only public library in Brooklyn for nearly 15 years Additionally the library served as a working classroom for the training of librarians and is cited as one of the first schools of Library science The Pratt Institute Library also made available the first reading room for children in New York City 18 By the turn of the century The School of Science and Technology had become Pratt s most prestigious and well known school and it constituted most of the school s enrollment 19 20 Across from East Building on Grand Avenue the institute constructed a new quad dedicated specifically for the engineering school Constructed over a period of a quarter of a century the Chemistry Machinery and Engineering buildings were constructed in the same architecture style unifying all disciplines offered by the School Pratt also had a large variety of courses dedicated specifically for women during this time Some of the 25 courses women could partake in included library science nursing home economics and fashion 19 By 1910 all of the departments of the institute were organized as individual schools including the Library School School of Domestic Science School of Fine and Applied Arts and the School of Science and Technology 19 Degree granting status and increase in enrollment Edit World War One Memorial in the Rose Garden As World War I faced the nation in 1914 Pratt partnered with the United States Government to aid in the war effort The School of Science and Technology had its own Student Army Training Corps which taught enlistees engineering skills needed for the war Students designed aircraft used in the war and trained operators In 1927 mechanical engineering alumnus Donald A Hall designed the Spirit of Saint Louis used by Charles Lindbergh in the world s first transatlantic flight 21 By the 1938 most programs at the school began offering four year Bachelor of Science degrees and Pratt transformed itself from being a technical school to a rigorous college 22 By granting bachelor s degrees Pratt had to revise its curriculum from being a two year school to now being a four year college The changes also reflected New York State requirements for granting degrees and stricter government and professional licensing regulations for graduates During this decade the foundation program for all Art School students was also founded 19 In 1940 Pratt began granting graduate degrees 22 During World War II Pratt also helped in the war effort as it did during World War I with the engineering school training servicemen before they were deployed Students helped to design camouflage for soldiers buildings and weapons Following the war the school saw a large influx of veterans enrolling as part of the GI Bill In the 1940s the School of Science and Technology changed its name to the School of Engineering and in 1946 established its own honor society with mechanical engineering being the most popular major at all of Pratt 17 In 1953 Francis H Horn became the first President of Pratt who was not a member of the Pratt family Enrollment continued to climb throughout the decade and in 1948 the institute reached an all time high in attendance with 6 000 students 17 By 1950 Pratt had become an accredited institution by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools 12 In 1954 the architecture department split from the Engineering School to become its own school 19 Campus reorganization Edit DeKalb Avenue Gate of Enclosed Campus As part of white flight in the 1950s and 1960s which affected the majority of New York City the neighborhood of Clinton Hill began to see a transformation from an upper class affluent white community to one chiefly populated by poor and working class people of color During this time Pratt considered moving its campus to more affluent Long Island or Manhattan and increase its attractiveness but decided to stay at its original Brooklyn campus due to the history and Charles Pratt s original mission 19 As part of Robert Moses plan for urban renewal in New York City Pratt s physical campus saw the greatest amount of change in its history Prior to the 1950s the school was located in separate buildings located on several public streets However after Moses clearance of many of the structures located between Pratt s buildings the land was given over to the school and a true campus was established Ryerson Street Grand Avenue Steuben Street and Emerson Place ceased to allow automobile traffic and the campus became enclosed forming the Grand Mall to connect the institute s buildings 23 The elevated train running along Grand Avenue between the East Building Student Union and the Engineering Quad was dismantled As a result of new real estate the school was able to build several new structures all designed by the firm of McKim Mead amp White including men s and women s dormitories and a new student union 24 In addition Moses construction projects around the school helped to build the School of Architecture Research funds were granted to the school to help discover new building techniques By 1963 the urban planning department formed the Pratt Center for Community Development in an attempt to revitalize Pratt s surrounding neighborhood and Brooklyn 25 Enrollment decline and financial issues Edit In the 1970s and continuing well into the 1980s New York City and Brooklyn still faced large amounts of crime and poverty and as a result enrollment fell and the school began to face a budget deficit Prospective students and faculty felt uneasy about the safety of the campus and community In 1974 the men s basketball team came to the attention of national media outlets as Cyndi Meserve joined the team becoming the first woman to play men s NCAA basketball 26 27 Students earning architecture degrees exceeded those who were earning mechanical engineering degrees in 1975 and architecture degrees became the most popular degree at Pratt a trend that still exists 17 In anticipation of the institute s centennial anniversary in 1987 several capital improvements were made to the campus trying to restore the condition of many of the dilapidated buildings The Grand Mall was re landscaped with new plantings brick pathways and lighting and the Newman Amphitheater was built in 1988 in celebration of the hundredth anniversary President Richardson Pratt Jr retired in 1990 after nearly twenty years of serving as president becoming the last president to be a descendant of founder Charles Pratt By 1993 Thomas F Schutte was appointed as president and has since become the longest standing president overseeing the institute not a part of the Pratt family In the same year Pratt controversially closed its School of Engineering an integral part of founder Charles Pratt s long term vision for the school Historically the school was Pratt s most successful school and many associated the school with its engineering program 19 In response to the institute wide decrease in enrollment and school wide budget issues closing the School of Engineering was thought of as being the only feasible option to keep the school s other programs afloat and to address the budget Students in the Engineering program were transferred to Polytechnic Institute of New York University while tenured professors were relocated to the School of Architecture and the science and math departments in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences 28 Revitalization and growth Edit As a result of closing the costly School of Engineering the school was able to get out of debt and on the track to financial success Funds were allocated for campus wide beautification projects and restoration and modernization of historic buildings starting with Memorial Hall Part of the beautification projects included adding the Pratt Institute Sculpture Park in 1999 where contemporary art sculptures are placed throughout the campus lawns and gardens making it the largest contemporary sculpture park in New York City 29 Pratt also began a partnership with Munson Williams Proctor and Delaware College of Art and Design for art students to study for two years at either campus and finish their degrees at Pratt s School of Art and Design in Brooklyn During the 1990s the school was able to increase enrollment by twenty five percent from approximately 3 000 students in 1990 to 4 000 students in 2000 19 Vincent A Stabile a 1940 graduate of the School of Engineering donated about 13 million to Pratt the largest donation made by any alumnus in the college s history 19 with the request to President Schutte that the donation be used to reopen the School of Engineering President Schutte rejected Mr Stabile s request but instead allocated the funds to construct a new residence hall named in the donor s honor From the mid 1980s to the 2000s Pratt experienced the transition from being mainly a commuter school to become a residential school through the construction of new residence halls Cannoneer Court Pantas Hall and Stabile Hall Presidents Edit Charles Pratt 1830 1891 president from 1887 to 1891 Charles Millard Pratt 1855 1935 1891 1893 Frederic B Pratt 1865 1945 1893 1937 Charles Pratt 1892 1937 1953 Francis H Horn 1953 1957 Robert Fisher Oxnam 1915 1974 1957 1960 Richard H Heindel 1961 1967 James B Donovan 1916 1970 1968 1970 Henry Saltzman 1970 1972 Richardson Pratt Jr 1923 2001 grandson of Charles Millard Pratt and great grandson of Charles Pratt 1972 1990 Warren F Ilchman 1933 1990 1993 Thomas F Schutte 1936 1993 2017 Frances Bronet 2018 presentAcademics EditRankings Edit Academic rankingsNationalForbes 30 328THE WSJ 31 227Pratt Institute is currently unranked by U S News amp World Report 32 In its specialty rankings U S News amp World Report ranks Pratt 8th among Best Fine Arts Programs and 34th in Best Library and Information Studies Programs 32 The Bachelor of Architecture program has been ranked as being in the top fifteen programs in the United States consistently since 2000 according to Architectural Record 33 Bloomberg BusinessWeek ranked the school as being one of the top 60 schools in the world to study design 34 and respondents to a Business Insider survey said that the school was the 6th best school for design in the world 35 While Kiplinger s Personal Finance previously named Pratt as one of the country s best values in private colleges and universities it is no longer listed in their rankings 36 It was previously included as one of the top values for academic quality and affordability out of more than 600 private institutions In 2021 Pratt Institute was ranked the ninth globally according to the QS World University Rankings by the subject Art and Design 37 Schools and academic divisions Edit Higgins Hall main facade of the School of Architecture Pratt Institute is divided into 6 schools and more than 28 departments and divisions offering over 22 undergraduate majors and 25 graduate majors The schools include School of Architecture Department of Undergraduate Architecture Department of Construction Management Facilities Management and Real Estate Practice Department of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment School of Art Department of Art and Design Education Department of Arts and Cultural Management Department of Creative Arts Therapy Department of Digital Arts and Animation Department of Design Management Department of Film and Video Department of Fine Arts Department of Photography Department of Associate Degrees School of Design Department of Undergraduate Communications Design Department of Graduate Communications Design Department of Fashion Design Department of Industrial Design Department of Interior Design School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Department of Humanities and Media Studies Department of the History of Art and Design Department of Math and Science Department of Social Science and Cultural Studies Hall Street pedestrian entrance Department of Writing Department of General Education Intensive English Program School of Information Pratt has the oldest continuously accredited library science program in the United States School of Continuing and Professional StudiesFormer schools Edit School of Domestic Arts and Sciences School of EngineeringJoint degree programs Edit Pratt Institute offers the following joint degree programs 38 J D Master in City and Regional Planning Brooklyn Law School and Pratt Institute jointly sponsor a program leading to the degrees of Juris Doctor J D and Master of Science M S in City and Regional Planning Accreditation Edit Pratt Institute is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools and is authorized to award academic degrees by the State of New York following guidelines established by the New York State Department of Education 39 The Bachelor of Architecture degree and the Master of Architecture degree at the School of Architecture are accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board 40 The undergraduate Interior Design program is accredited by the Council for Interior Design Accreditation 41 Graduate programs in Library and Information Science Art Therapy and Art Education are all accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of the American Library Association Education Approval Board of the American Art Therapy Association and RATE respectively 39 The School of Art and Design is one of only forty three schools part of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design 42 Demographics Edit Ethnic composition of undergraduates 2018 19 43 Undergrads U S Census 44 White non Hispanic 35 4 60 4 African American 3 4 13 4 Asian American 13 2 5 9 Native American 0 1 1 3 Hispanic American of any race 9 5 18 3 Two or more races non Hispanic 3 5 2 7 International students 34 0 N A Unknown 1 0 N A Pratt Institute students numbering 3 483 undergraduates and 1 392 graduate students in Fall 2019 come from 78 countries and 47 states 43 Women represent 71 of undergraduates and 74 of graduate students 43 Brooklyn campus Edit Cannon Court Main Building as viewed from Rose Garden Pratt Institute s main campus is located on a historic esteemed 45 enclosed 25 acre 100 000 m2 campus located in the Clinton Hill neighborhood in Brooklyn 2 miles from Downtown Brooklyn and 3 miles from Lower Manhattan Midtown Manhattan is just 5 miles from the campus The campus is accessible by two public entrances both of which close in the evening hours and are guarded by security 24 hours a day The main gate located at Willoughby Avenue on the north side of campus is accessible for pedestrians and vehicles while the secondary pedestrian only gate located at the corner of Hall Street and DeKalb Avenue at the southwest part of campus is convenient for commuters and for students to get to Higgins Hall In addition there are three other swipe card access gates available only for student use The campus is very park like and fully landscaped and provides a stark contrast to the urban neighborhood which surrounds the school The four main areas of the campus include the Library Rose Garden Cannon Court Newman Mall and Amphitheater and the Engineering Quad The historically significant Rose Garden is located directly north of the library and was built as a part of the library acting as a public park At the center of the garden is a 1926 World War I memorial flagpole detailed with eagles male and female busts 46 The Cannon Court is located directly south of the library and serves as the main entrance from the Hall Street gate A central feature of the court is a large bronze Spanish cannon from 1720 originally from Seville Spain and brought to Pratt from Morro Castle in Havana Cuba in 1899 24 Trees and meandering pathways lead to the library and Newman Mall The Newman Mall takes up the center of the campus with many of the academic buildings alongside the mall The mall is characterized by brick pathways with mature trees lining a central lawn To the north of the mall is a small amphitheater designed by Skidmore Owings and Merrill 47 The Engineering Quadrangle which is recognized as a historic landmark is located north of the Newman Mall toward the eastern side of campus with the Chemistry Machinery and Engineering buildings enclosing the quad which has terraced landscaping and gardens with many mature trees The entire campus is open to the public as park space during the daytime Throughout the campus many contemporary sculptures fill the gardens and landscape making the campus home to the largest sculpture park in New York City 29 The sculptures are loaned to Pratt and are changed on a rotating basis Public Art Review recognized the campus as having one of the 10 best college and university art collections in the country 48 List of sculptures on campus Edit 49 50 Displayed since Name of Sculpture Artist2016 La Mediterranee Philippe Anthonioz1981 Accord Final Arman1999 Picnic Table Siah Armajani1993 Leaf Ilan Averbuch2005 The Book of Stone and Steel2011 Maze 1 Phyllis Baker Hammond1995 Image 95 Masaru Bando2014 Whispering Bench Texting Cathey Billian1995 Wind Reeds Bill amp Mary Buchen2007 Seven of Hearts Noel Copeland2009 Brooklyn Blooms2013 Half Story Mountain Grayson Cox2002 Jive Mark di Suvero2013 Learning Anne Gillen1988 1993 Leucantha Philip Grausman2004 Epistrophy Straight No Chaser Round Midnight Richard Heinrich2005 Skylark David Henderson2009 Silo Tomasz Jan Groza2001 Fourth Dimension Ann Jon2008 Segmented Flower Form Part 1 Mary Judge2011 24M Michael Kalish2001 Lions at the Gate Wendy Klemperer1990 1999 6 Copper Spheres Grace Knowlton2003 Saratoga Winter Harry E Leigh1996 F R S B Donald Lipski2000 Uplifting Sandy Macleod1979 Untitled Michael Malpass1988 Zinnia1979 Tool Ball1986 Trilogy square 2012 Ascent Jackson Martin2008 2009 Waiting for Coyote Nao Matsumoto1996 Manhole Covers Brad Michael McCallum2007 Pratt Pillows Mark Mennin2007 Untitled Sung Ha NoDate unknown Promise Neil NolandDate unknown Spinoff2011 Sun Avital Oz2006 Object Product Mark Parsons2012 Double Sbalzo Beverly Pepper2006 Ecstasy Nova Mihai Popa2004 Aerated Rectangles Salvatore M Romano2009 2010 Five Equal VolumesDate unknown Untitled Tony Rosenthal2007 Four Floating Disks G A Ruda2004 Particle Wave Time Space Continuum Karl Saliter2006 Dream of Africa Shin Sang Ho2012 Scarce of Fishing Arden Scott1990 Chair Alan Siegel2014 Intersections Gardens 4 5 6 7 8 9 Arlene Slavin2007 Block 700 Sean Slemon2001 Guardian Leon Smith2004 Red Cabinet2002 Triangle2006 Black E C Tower Kenneth Snelson2003 Silent Beam Takashi Soga2000 Siting on His Laurels Dana L StewartDate Unknown Bench George SugarmanDate Unknown Right Angles Gunnar Theel2012 Brickhead Yemanga James TylerDate Unknown Three Cement Goats Unknown Artist2002 Mier Boaz Vaadia2002 Sara2002 Rebecca2006 Ode to Miles Davis Hans Van de Bovenkamp1974 Undulation2009 The End Justifies the Means Justifies the End Martha Walker2012 Pratt Desk Allan Wexler1979 Swirl Jack Youngerman1981 Wave1971 Blade2006 Welcome II Raphael ZollingerBuildings EditPratt is home to a diverse collection of buildings composed of several architectural styles Most of the buildings at the school were built before World War II in the style of Romanesque Revival Victorian and Neoclassical styles and were designed by prominent nineteenth and twentieth century architects After the war Pratt began building more contemporary styled buildings In 2011 Architectural Digest named Pratt as being one of the top ten most architecturally significant college campuses in the country for its seamless collection of buildings ranging from since the 1800s 45 The Main Building East Hall Building and Student Union are all located adjacent to one another and make up a complex of the original buildings all built specifically for the Institute in 1887 Located at the north central part of campus the Main Building is a six story Romanesque Revival brick building designed by Lamb and Rich and was the first building to open at the school 12 The roof features an iconic clock tower which overlooks the Rose Garden The building houses administrative offices classrooms and art studios for the Arts Department of the School of Art and Design In February 2013 a fire erupted throughout the top floors of the building destroying much of the interior structure and students work 51 East Hall is located directly behind Main Hall and faces Grand Walk Designed by William Windrim a main feature of the brick building is the large smokestack which served the institute s power generation plant Within the Hall are a variety of services for students including Career Services Student Activities International Student Affairs and the Pratt Chapel Located in the lower level of the building is Pratt s continuously operating privately owned steam powered electrical generating plant built originally to serve the power needs of the school In 1977 the facility was recognized by the American Society of Mechanical Engineers and named a National Mechanical Engineering Landmark 52 The Student Union by architect William Tubby was originally built as the Trade School building but soon after completion was completely remodeled as the Student Union complete with gymnasium and swimming pool In 1982 the building was renovated again as the new Student Union 24 All three buildings wrap around an interior courtyard which connects out to the Newman Mall and Library Rose Garden The centerpiece of the courtyard is a 17th century Italian marble well head fountain purchased by the Pratt family in 1900 24 Other structures include South Hall located along Reyerson Walk to the direct south of Main Building was finished in 1892 by William Tubby and was built as the Pratt High School 53 When the high school closed near the turn of the century the building was used for the School of Domestic Arts and Sciences The building is now home to classrooms studios and offices for programs in the Department of Fine Arts part of the School of Art and Design Pratt Institute Library which was opened in 1888 to serve students and the general public as well became the first free Public Library in Brooklyn The architect of the building was William Tubby of Brooklyn The decoration in the building was done by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Company The Chemistry Machinery and Engineering Buildings are located across from Grand Walk and East Building which are clustered around the Engineering Quad s lawn and gardens They were built in phases between 1908 and 1928 and designed by architecture firm Howells amp Stokes 12 These buildings originally housed courses for Pratt s School of Engineering until it was dismantled in 1993 The machinery building houses a Print lab Metal Shop Ceramics Studios and WoodShop The second floor of the Engineering building now houses Pratt s largest computer lab on campus with several classrooms of Mac and PC workstations and a collection of scanners printers and plotters The basement houses Pratt s Material Lab and Center for Sustainable Design Strategies The school s auditorium Memorial Hall was built in 1927 with John Mead Howells serving as the architect It is located across from the Rose Garden along Reyerson Walk between the Main Building and North Hall Built as part of the urban renewal project led by Robert Moses North Hall is located directly north of Memorial Hall and was designed by McKim Mead and White in 1958 24 The building houses Pratt s Main cafeteria and the school s bank Classrooms for the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences are located on the upper levels of the building DeKalb Hall and the Information Science Center were also designed by McKim Mead and White earlier in 1955 They originally served as men s and women s dormitories respectively until Pratt acquired Willoughby Hall 24 After the acquisition of Willoughby the buildings were remodeled to serve classroom and administrative needs DeKalb Hall located to the far west of campus and south of the Library and Cannon Court is home to administrative offices The Information Science Center is also located to the far west of campus but north of the Library and Rose Garden which was home to the School of Information The Juliana Curran Terian Design Center is made up of two separate wings Steuben Hall to the east and Pratt Studios west which hold all of Pratt s design programs Located at the southern edge of the campus between Pantas Hall and the Athletics and Recreation Center this building is home to the Interior Design Industrial Design Communication Design and Fashion Design Departments as well as the givetake art supply recycling initiative At the center of the building there is a small courtyard Originally the center was two separate buildings that were acquired by Pratt in 1962 and 1970 respectively 12 The buildings were originally built around the turn of the century and served as factories until Pratt acquired them A new glass and metal entry pavilion named in honor of architecture alumni and donor Juliana Curran Terian was constructed in 2007 54 and was designed to the two original separate brick buildings The lead architect for the project was the School of Architecture s Dean Thomas Hanrahan 54 Myrtle Hall is Pratt s newest building having opened in 2010 The building located one block north of campus was designed by Pratt Institute School of Architecture alumnus Jack Esterson AIA of the New York City architecture and engineering firm WASA Studio A and has achieved LEED Gold Certification The building houses Student Services registrar bursar and financial aid Admissions the Pratt Center for Community Development and the Digital Art Center The Caroline Ladd Pratt House is owned by the school It is used as the college president s mansion and for gala events 55 It was completed in 1898 and designed by architects Babb Cook and Willard for Frederic B Pratt the institute s third president the son of Charles Pratt and family It is located two blocks west of the school on Clinton Avenue near the other Pratt family mansions Higgins Hall located one block south of the main campus houses the entire School of Architecture with the exception of Construction Management programs The historic Romanesque Revival landmark building with a contemporary center wing houses the school s Administrative Offices computer labs student classrooms and laboratories a lecture hall a small cafe and the Hazel and Robert H Siegel Gallery The building was originally built for the prestigious Adelphi Academy now Adelphi University in phases from 1868 through 1890 by Mundell and Teckritz and Charles C Haight Charles Pratt also partially funded construction of the building as part of his philanthropic efforts 56 The building was given to Pratt Institute in 1965 by the wife of John Higgins architect and alumni of Adelphi Academy The School of Architecture was relocated here 57 In 1996 the building experienced a major fire destroying the center wing of the building and severely damaging the northern and southern wings 58 In 2005 the school replaced the center wing with a new sleek and contemporary glass structure which linked historic brick northern and southern wings designed by Steven Holl and incorporated complementary contrast to the original essence 59 As part of the rebuilding of Higgins Hall Rogers Marvel Architects restored and renovated the original nineteenth century wings to their former glory 60 Library Memorial Hall East Hall Engineering Building Chemistry BuildingHistoric sites Edit Pratt Institute Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic district Show map of New York City Show map of New York Show map of the United StatesLocationRoughly bounded by Hall St Dekalb Ave Willoughby St and Emerson Pl Brooklyn New YorkArea9 acres 3 6 ha ArchitectMultipleArchitectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals Renaissance RomanesqueNRHP reference No 90001138 61 Added to NRHPMarch 23 2005A number of Pratt Institute s buildings and landscapes are historically significant The Pratt Institute Historic District is a national historic district that comprises 10 contributing buildings built between 1885 and 1936 Several buildings are recognized as being New York City Designated Landmarks It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2005 61 and was awarded the Getty Foundation Campus Heritage Grant 62 Two buildings outside the historic district Higgins Hall and the Caroline Ladd Pratt House are also listed on the historic register as being a part of the Clinton Hill Historic District The buildings and structures listed on the U S National Register of Historic Places for their architectural or historical significance are 12 Caroline Ladd Pratt House Chemistry Building Children s Portico East Hall Engineering Building Engineering Quadrangle Higgins Hall Machinery Building Main Building Main Building Courtyard Memorial Hall Pratt Institute Library Pratt Institute Library Rose Garden South Hall Student UnionResidence halls Edit Pratt a residential campus offers seven different residence options for its students All residence hall students are provided with a bed twin extra long a desk a chair and a dresser Students residing in a dorm without in unit kitchens are required to be on a mandatory meal plan Stabile Emerson ELJ and Pantas while those with in unit kitchens are able to sign up for an optional meal plan Willoughby and Grand Avenue Emerson Place Leo J Pantas Hall and Vincent A Stabile Hall are the primary freshman dorms In total 51 percent of undergraduate students reside on campus while 92 percent of incoming freshmen students reside on campus 63 Pratt offers the following residence halls for students to choose from Esther Lloyd Jones Hall is named for a trendsetter in modern American higher education 64 The building was originally a private apartment building built in 1921 but was acquired by Pratt in 1964 as use for dormitories ELJ accommodates students single and double rooms in apartment style accommodations ELJ is occupied primarily by upperclassmen continuing students Emerson Hall is the newest dorm on the Pratt campus opening Fall 2019 It was built specifically to be a freshman dorm It was collaboratively designed by CannonDesign and Hanrahan Meyers Architects with intention of encouraging interaction 65 The dorm is off campus across the street from the Film and Video Building The dorm contains double rooms with several individual bathrooms and separate individual shower rooms on each floor to be shared by those inhabiting each floor Each floor also contains a large central common space with a small kitchen on each floor Leo J Pantas Hall was opened in 1987 and designed by Skidmore Owings and Merrill and sits centrally located on campus Students live in four person suites which consist of two double rooms two people in each double room and each suite has its own bathroom Suites are single sex but floors are co ed The building boasts a work study rooms and communal lounges The building was design in brick with a clock tower echoing the style of original 1887 Main Building Pantas is primarily a freshmen residence hall The historic Pratt Townhouses Vincent A Stabile Hall opened in the Fall of 1999 and designed by Pasanella Klein Stolzman Berg Architects Named for the donor and graduate of the Engineering School it was designed for new undergraduate students It houses 240 students in four person suites Each suite consists of two double rooms with a shared bath There are kitchenettes located on each floor Stabile is primarily a freshmen residence hall The Pratt Townhouses are historic landmarks which were originally constructed from 1901 to 1910 in the colonial revival style to serve as faculty housing The townhomes were designed by Hobart C Walker After being neglected for several years Pratt renovated the townhouses to be used by upperclassmen Each unit consists of six single rooms spread across three stories a full kitchen living room parlor basement and shared backyard Willoughby Hall is a former private apartment building built as part of Robert Moses urban renewal projects surround Pratt and is the largest residence hall Built in 1957 by architect John Mead Howells the 16 story building accommodates 800 undergraduate men and women In addition to the standard furniture all apartments have a kitchen table stove and refrigerator All students are assigned to double triple or single spaces The converted apartments consist of at least one double or triple that occupies the former living room space of the apartment The number of students residing in a given apartment ranges from two to six students depending upon the size of the converted apartment studio one two or three bedroom Grand Avenue Residence is home to new and continuing graduate students The building can accommodate 50 students in efficiency apartments double and single and private single rooms within two and three bedroom apartments A double efficiency apartment is two students sharing a one room apartment with kitchen and bath A single efficiency apartment is one student in a private one room apartment with kitchen and bath A shared single is two or more students each with its own private bedroom sharing kitchen bath and living room The building is located one block from campus Each living room is furnished with a sofa club chair coffee table kitchen table and chairs Transportation Edit The Clinton Washington Avenues subway station of the G train is close to Pratt s Brooklyn campus Pratt does not provide any official sponsored transportation options for its students but there are several public transportation options located directly off Pratt s main campus The school is served by MTA New York City Bus routes with the B38 bus route servicing the campus to the south with stations along DeKalb and Lafayette Avenues and the B54 bus route serving the area north of the campus along Myrtle Avenue 66 In addition the New York City Subway s G train has one station located at the intersection of Washington and Lafayette Avenues and another located at the intersection of Classon and Lafayette Avenues The Clinton Washington Avenues station IND Crosstown Line is located directly across the street from Higgins Hall The Classon Avenue station IND Crosstown Line is located one block south from the south east corner of campus In addition the C train has an entrance to Clinton Washington Avenues station IND Fulton Street Line four blocks south of the Hall Gate entrance and three blocks south of Higgins Hall 67 New York City s public bike share program Citi Bike has stations nearby at Lafayette Avenue and Saint James Place at Hall Street and Willoughby Avenue and at Emerson Place and Myrtle Avenue 68 The Long Island Rail Road at Atlantic Terminal is located a short walk from the campus Pratt participates in New Jersey Transit s University Partnership Program where students can receive a twenty five percent discount on monthly passes based out of Penn Station in Manhattan 69 Pratt Manhattan Edit Pratt Manhattan The Pratt Manhattan center located at 144 West 14th Street between 6th and 7th Avenue is home to Pratt s associate degrees programs in graphic design illustration and digital design and interactive media an undergraduate program in construction management several of Pratt s graduate programs including the master s degrees in the School of Information Facilities management Design Management Arts and Cultural Management and the School of Continuing and Professional Studies which offers an array of non credit courses and Certificate Programs including certificates in Digital Design Advanced Perfumery Creative Interiors Floral Art and Design among many others This seven story historic building was acquired by Pratt in 2000 The Institute restored the building s exterior to its original facade highlighting its decorative architectural and design elements and renovated the interior to feature its high ceilings and wood beams A lovely staircase from the building s lobby leads to the Pratt Manhattan Gallery This new building houses the School for Information the Graduate Programs in Design Management Arts and cultural Management the two year associate degree Programs in Digital Design Graphic Design and Illustration and the Manhattan office of the School of Continuing and Professional Studies The modern building has many resources like a library computer lab and meeting spaces In 1974 the New York Phoenix School of Design formerly the New York School of Applied Design for Women and the Phoenix Art Institute merged with the Pratt Institute to form the Pratt New York Phoenix School of Design which offered three year certificate programs in art and design at least into the late 1970s It is located in the landmark New York School of Applied Design Building at 160 Lexington Avenue at the northwest corner of Lexington and 30th Street 70 At this time Manhattan had long been the epicenter of publishing design during the latter twentieth century This new commercial art dedicated satellite was modeled to apply intensely concentrated vocational training in graphic design illustration package design and textile design Its faculty was largely composed of Manhattan s working professionals who themselves had achieved the level of skill necessary to meet the city s global defining standards Magazines books music albums movie posters print and television advertisements and packaging for all forms of retail products were the intended goals for its graduates as well as Manhattan s omnipresent fashion industry In addition the below ground space in the school was converted into a state of the art printmaking facility teaching artist created lithography silk screening and engraving Student life EditClubs and student organizations Edit As of October 2022 Pratt is home to 122 clubs with a wide range in focuses 71 Some of these clubs include the Pratt Photo League the Latinx Student Alliance the Pratt Institute Botanical Society and the Students for Socialist Revolution 72 Clubs at Pratt don t just hold meetings but also host on campus events and arrange exhibitions of club members work Pratt Cats Edit Pratt institute is known for the campus Pratt Cats which roam freely on campus and inspired the schools mascot Charlie citation needed The cats include Charlie L il Mama Mustachio Shadow Thomas Earl and Benji They have heated homes on campus and are fed by staff and students Student media Edit Pratt has several student media groups including a Film Club The Prattler is Pratt s quarterly student magazine newspaper established in 1940 Static Fish a comic book publication established over 20 years ago Ubiquitous is Pratt s literary and arts magazine published twice a year with reading event on campus per semester and also maintains a blog 73 Pratt s yearbook Prattonia is designed by selected Pratt students Pratt Radio a student run internet radio station broadcasts on the web Originally broadcasting from a limited range signal in the mid 1980s the FCC stepped in and shut the operation down after students modified the broadcast tower rendering Pratt Radio pirate radio citation needed The station later re emerged in 2001 as a legitimate internet only station The Felt is an online journal of poetry and prose from the MFA Writing program 74 Fraternities and sororities Edit The Inter Greek Council is responsible for all Greek life organizations at Pratt Institute In total Pratt offers one fraternity for male students and two sororities for female students Pi Sigma Chi Theta Phi Alpha Sigma Sigma SigmaAthletics EditPratt athletic teams are the Cannoneers The institute is a member of the Division III level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA primarily competing in the Coast to Coast Athletic Conference C2C since the 2020 21 academic year The Cannoneers previously competed in the American Collegiate Athletic Association ACAA during their exploratory status in the NCAA Division III ranks from 2018 19 to 2019 20 75 They also competed as a founding member of the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference HVIAC of the United States Collegiate Athletic Association USCAA from 2004 05 to 2017 18 Pratt competes in 15 intercollegiate varsity sports Men s sports include basketball cross country soccer tennis track amp field and volleyball while women s sports include basketball cross country soccer tennis track amp field and volleyball and co ed sports include equestrian Accomplishments Edit Men s basketball Edit The men s basketball team has a storied tradition including the fourth longest collegiate basketball rivalry in the nation between Pratt and Polytechnic University Brooklyn NY with Pratt holding the overall record 78 59 The Cannoneers also took home a national collegiate championship title in 1901 and made four NAIA 59 60 61 and 62 and two ECAC 77 79 post season appearances Former players included Ed Mazria 62 who was drafted by the New York Knicks and Anthony Heyward 94 who currently tours with the And1 streetball team as Half Man Half Amazing Bernard Chang was formerly captain of the men s varsity basketball team Men s soccer Edit The men s soccer team won the NAIA tournament in 1959 edging Elizabethtown College 4 3 in double overtime Cross country Edit The women s cross country team recently captured the 2006 HMWAC championship title and coach Dalton Evans won Coach of the Year honors The men s cross country team also has a championship title The women s tennis team has won three HVWAC titles including an appearance in the ECAC tournament Intramurals Edit In addition there are intramural activities schedules throughout the year ranging from individual tennis and track amp field to team sports soccer basketball volleyball and touch football Two premier student intramurals events include the fall classic Halloween Pratt Ratt Outdoor Obstacle Relay Race and the annual Mr amp Ms Pratt All Thatt Fitness amp Artistic Expression Pageant finale Others Edit Facilities Edit The Athletics Resource Center A R C is home to the athletic department and features the largest clear span space in Brooklyn It also hosts the annual Colgate Games the nation s largest amateur track series for girls from elementary school through college 76 Mascot Edit The school s mascot the Cannoneer derives from the 19th century cannon that stands prominently near the main gate to the campus Cast in bronze in Seville Spain the cannon bears the insignia of Philip V and was brought to Pratt from the walls of Morro Castle in Havana Cuba in 1899 Notable alumni EditMain page Category Pratt Institute alumni Science technology and engineering Edit Lloyd Espenschied Joshua Davis Pelle Petterson Bill Garity Donald A Hall Irving Langmuir recipient of the 1932 Nobel Prize in Chemistry 77 John M Pierce David Sarnoff Thomas J R Hughes Architecture Edit Martin L Beck Guy Bolton Alfred Mosher Butts Richard Foster Henry Hohauser Malcolm Holzman Fay Kellogg Johannes Knoops 78 Edward Mazria Alan Mruvka George Ranalli Wallace Rayfield Mott B Schmidt Annabelle Selldorf Peter L Shelton Robert Siegel William Van Allen Bruce Wasersztein Lorenzo Snow Young Carlos Zapata Peter Zumthor Government politics and social issues Edit Attorney Lynne StewartCongressmen government officials and politicians Joseph Amenowode William D Byron Ben Knight George Lincoln Rockwell left in his final year Elizabeth CrowleyReligious leaders Charles E Pont William Howard HoopleScholars Irvin Leigh MatusLibrarians Mary Elizabeth Wood Carolyn F UlrichCrime Leo FrankAmerican Red Cross Elva A George Entertainment and communications Edit Musicians Suzanne Fiol John Flansburgh Daniel Lopatin Kim Schifino Matt Johnson Rob Zombie James Reams Lindsey Way Clint Houston Lee Sang eun Kat ZhangActors Harvey Fierstein Martin Landau Jeff Morrow Robert Redford Phoebe Robinson Melora Walters Alexandra AmonDirectors filmmakers Bob Giraldi Eric Goldberg Hawley Pratt Glenn Ficarra John Requa Robert Wilson Shawn Christensen Owen KlineAuthors screenwriters Gwendolyn B Bennett Mark Mathew Braunstein Rich Burlew Daniel Clowes Bryan Collier Sarah Louise Delany Tomie dePaola Glenn Ficarra Pete Hamill Norton Juster Arnold Lobel Marcus McLaurin Laura Numeroff John Peterson Matthew Reinhart John Requa Michael Rosen Elliot Tiber Dante Tomaselli Liz HannahCommunications Andre Baruch George Lois Earl Mayan Paul Rand Robert Riger Louis SilversteinJournalists Robert King Art and design Edit Industrial Design William Boyer Pres Bruning Jason Freeny Donald Genaro Pelle Petterson Charles Pollock Tony SchwartzFashion Design Jeffrey Banks Donna Chambers Ben de Lisi Betsey Johnson Vera Maxwell Norman Norell Jeremy Scott Barbra WalzIllustration Marshall Arisman C C Beall Daniel Clowes Frances W Delehanty Tomie dePaola Wendy Anderson Halperin Cheryl Hanna Candy Jernigan Jacqui Morgan Kadir Nelson Roberto Parada Robert Sabuda Bernard Safran Sam Savitt Gordon A Sheehan Pamela Colman Smith Leonard Starr Samm Schwartz Archie comics illustrator Susanne Suba Cyndy Szekeres Chris TsirgiotisFine Arts Imna Arroyo Conor Mccreedy David Ascalon Ken Bald Joseph Barbera Leigh Behnke Aisha Tandiwe Bell Trudy Benson Dave Berg Willard Bond Emery Bopp Paul Calle Aurore Chabot Bernard Chang Jacky Connolly Roger Cook Louis Delsarte Gus Edson Frances Farrand Dodge Jules Feiffer Richard Gallo Mary Godfrey Felix Gonzalez Torres Bill Griffith Jim Hodges Samantha Katz Ellsworth Kelly Jack Kirby Lili Lakich Greer Lankton Victoria de Lesseps Kermit Love Gina Lucia Peter Max Philomena Marano Soraya Marcano Robert Mapplethorpe Wendy McMurdo Mort Meskin Sergio Rossetti Morosini Cyrilla Mozenter Marilyn Nance Abraham Nathanson Martin Nodell David Nyzio John Pai Roxy Paine Denis Peterson Albert John Pucci David Ratcliff Nicholas Reale 79 Edna Reindel Rob Redding Willy Bo Richardson Mario Robinson Mike Roy Stefan Sagmeister Jenny Scobel Barbara Segal Joan Semmel Hadieh Shafie Nat Mayer Shapiro Susan Louise Shatter Jean Shin Rob Sheridan David Silverman Joseph A Smith Yoshi Sodeoka Therman Statom Swoon Joseph Szabo Susan L Talbott Mickalene Thomas Salman Toor Boaz Vaadia Frank Verlizzo Max Weber Kent Williams William T Williams Terry Winters Lance Wyman Robert Yasuda Marie ZimmermannSports Edit Sarah SchkeeperBusiness Edit Fred TrumpNotable faculty EditAndrea Ackerman artist Joseph Barbera animator and co creator of the Tom and Jerry series of animated shorts Karen Bausman architect Jonathan Beller film theorist Michael Brennan painter Howard Buchwald artist Jonas Coersmeier architect Peggy Cyphers painter Arthur Deshaies printmaker Greg Drasler painter Arthur Wesley Dow decorative arts Shannon Ebner photographer chairperson of the photography department Fritz Eichenberg printmaker Carla Gannis artist Tula Giannini musicologist information scientist Philip Guston painter Eric Goldberg film director and animator Stephen Hilger photographer Ralph Johonnot taught color theory decorative arts and interior design 1909 1912 former head of design department Peter Kayafas photographer Sean Kelly writer Josh Koury filmmaker Manuel de Landa adjunct philosopher artist Thomas Lanigan Schmidt painter Jacob Lawrence painter John Lehr photographer photographer Matthew Leifheit photographer Philip Johnson architect Mickalene Thomas artist Sibyl Moholy Nagy architectural and art historian Sergio Rossetti Morosini Painter Sculptor Mario Naves art critic Toshio Odate Japanese woodworker sculptor 80 Denis Peterson painter Nick Relph photographer and filmmaker K 12 center instructor Carole Rosenthal English and Humanities professor emeritus Carissa Rodriguez photographer Nasser Sharify father of international librarianship Matthew Sharpe author Carrie Schneider photographer Anna Shteynshleyger photographer Milagros de la Torre photographer Anne Turyn photographer Charles Warner architect Eva Zeisel ceramic artist designerReferences Edit As of June 30 2020 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA February 19 2021 Retrieved February 20 2021 ABOUT FRANCES BRONET Pratt Institute Retrieved April 26 2021 Common Data Set 2018 2019 PDF Pratt Institute Retrieved April 12 2019 a b c https www usnews com best colleges pratt institute 2798 student life a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Identity Guidelines PDF Pratt Institute Retrieved May 24 2018 Helena Duncan B F A Writing 17 Wins Pratt Mascot Naming Contest Pratt Institute Retrieved May 24 2018 Pratt at a Glance Pratt Institute Retrieved May 24 2018 Tabor Mary B W 13 December 1991 Pratt Decides to end school for engineers NYT Retrieved 15 February 2013 Pratt Institute a b c d Treasures of New York Pratt Institute via watch wliw org Boston Evening Transcript Google News Archive Search news google com a b c d e f 45073 Pratt MP Report Part 1 Intro Analysis 060912 indd PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 29 Retrieved 2013 06 29 Morris Suzanne Spellen aka Montrose August 23 2011 Building of the Day 375 Pearl Street Brownstoner Shorthand Educator A Monthly Magazine January 7 1898 via Google Books Morris Suzanne Spellen aka Montrose September 2 2010 Stenography and the Law Brownstoner The History of Pratt Archived 2013 05 30 at the Wayback Machine Pratt Institute Retrieved 8 May 2013 a b c d Prattfolio Fall Winter 2011 Generations Issue by Pratt Institute Issuu issuu com About Pratt Institute Libraries a b c d e f g h i Prattfolio 125th Anniversary Commemorative Issue by Pratt Institute Issuu issuu com From an Educational Experiment Pratt s Institute Has Grown in 25 Years Into a Splendid Institution With 4 31 0 Students PDF The New York Times 2 June 1912 Pratt Institute Celebrating 125 Years Pratt Icons Gallery Donald A Hall Archived from the original on 2013 07 28 Retrieved 2013 06 26 a b http www pratt edu uploads undergrad bulletin pdf bare URL PDF Powell Michael 6 May 2007 A Tale Of Two Cities The New York Times p 1 a b c d e f Archived copy Archived from the original on 2015 05 12 Retrieved 2013 06 26 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Pratt Center Story Pratt Center Lakeland Ledger Google News Archive Search news google com Making history but just wanting to play ball The Portland Press Herald Maine Sunday Telegram Archived from the original on 2013 06 28 Tabor Mary B W 13 December 1991 Pratt Decides To End School For Engineers Page 2 New York Times The New York Times a b Pratt Sculpture Park Gridskipper Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 a b Pratt Institute Overall Rankings US News America s Top Architecture Schools 2020 Architectural Record Retrieved 3 January 2021 The Best Design Programs in the World BusinessWeek Dickey Megan Rose The World s 25 Best Design Schools Business Insider Kiplinger s Best College Values 2019 Kiplinger 25 July 2019 QS World University Rankings for Art amp Design 2021 Top Universities Our Academic Program Joint Degree Programs Brooklyn Law School Archived from the original on February 24 2011 Retrieved March 24 2011 a b About Pratt Mission and Governance Message from the President Pratt Accreditation Archived from the original on 2013 10 23 Retrieved 2013 06 27 National Architectural Accrediting Board Accredited Programs CIDA Pratt Institute a b c Statistics Pratt Institute Retrieved May 9 2020 Quick Facts Race and Hispanic Origin Population Estimates July 1 2019 United States Census Bureau Retrieved May 9 2020 a b 15 College Campuses with the Best Architecture Architectural Digest September 1 2011 Flagpole Flickr Condivisione di foto Slesin Suzanne 2 June 1988 Pratt at Its Centennial to Get a Mall The New York Times About Pratt Visit Pratt Tour the Campus Sculpture Park Archived from the original on 2013 09 13 Retrieved 2013 06 29 Sculpture Park Guide PDF Pratt Institute PRATT INSTITUTE SCULPTURE PARK LIBGUIDE Pratt Institute Huge fire tears through Pratt Institute building WABC TV Archived from the original on 19 February 2013 Retrieved 15 February 2013 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Retrieved 2013 06 29 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Pratt Institute High School Flickr Condivisione di foto a b Juliana Curran Terian Design Center Pavilion Named Winner of 2010 Building Brooklyn Award Pratt Institute News Pratt Institute 6 June 2022 Pratt Institute Caroline Ladd Pratt House Retrieved 12 September 2012 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 19 Retrieved 2013 06 29 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Higgins Hall Flickr Condivisione di foto Sengupta Somini 28 July 1996 Pratt s Dream Is Thwarted By a Fire The New York Times Steven Holl Architects Archived from the original on 2015 11 14 Retrieved 2013 06 29 Pratt Institute School of Architecture Rogers Marvel Architects www rogersmarvel com a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 Campus Heritage Grants 2005 Getty Press Release Welcome to Admissions Request Information Facts and Figures Bowling Green State University Brochure PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 01 19 Retrieved 2010 05 09 Pratt Opens Emerson Place Residence an Innovative New Home for First Year Students Pratt 2022 06 06 Retrieved 2022 10 04 Brooklyn Bus Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority October 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 Subway Map PDF Metropolitan Transportation Authority September 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 Citi Bike Stations New Jersey Transit Pratt Phoenix School of Design PDF Neighborhood Preservation Center Archived from the original PDF on March 11 2010 Retrieved February 17 2017 Student Involvement Pratt Retrieved 2022 10 04 Pratt Institute pratt campuslabs com Retrieved 2022 10 04 Pratt Institute Student Media Organizations Archived from the original on 2013 05 27 Retrieved 2010 11 14 Pratt Institute Academics School of Liberal Arts and Sciences The Department of Writing Graduate Writing Program The Felt www pratt edu NCAA approves Pratt Pratt Institute Athletics Pratt Institute Archived from the original on 10 October 2018 Retrieved 11 October 2018 Colgate Games homepage Rosenfeld Albert 2013 The Quintessence of Irving Langmuir Elsevier p 62 ISBN 9781483185484 Interior Design Faculty FITNYC edu Fashion Institute of Technology Retrieved 16 January 2017 Staff Nicholas Reade 62 Courier News November 20 1984 Accessed January 8 2018 Nicholas Reale a distinguished water colorist who was named New Jersey Artist of the Year in 1969 died Sunday Nov 18 1984 at St Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston He was a graduate of Pratt Institute in New York and taught art classes at Seton Hall University Chamberlain Frances 1996 06 02 Two Studios With One Goal Perfection The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 09 18 Further reading EditElbert Hubbard 1909 Little Journeys to the Homes Tarbell Ida M 1904 The History of Standard Oil Council for Advancement and Support of Education CASE Web site Pratt Institute page Pratt Institute official Web site History page New York Times article announcing end of engineering school 1 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pratt Institute Official website Official athletics website Pratt Institute Documentary produced by Treasures of New York Historic American Engineering Record HAER No NY 70 Pratt Institute Power Generating Plant Willoughby Avenue between Classen amp Hall Streets Brooklyn Kings County NY 2 photos 1 data page 1 photo caption page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pratt Institute amp oldid 1153245735, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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