Cornell West Campus

"[2] Cornell's first president, Andrew Dickson White, was broadly opposed to student dormitories, believing that boarding houses and fraternities provided a superior living environment.

After Prudence Risley Hall was designed as a women's residence in 1911, efforts began on a men's residential complex on West Campus.

[4] In the 1920s, West Campus was envisioned as fully Gothic in style, connected to Frederick Law Olmsted's plan of a grand terrace overlooking Cayuga Lake.

Rhode Island architect F. Ellis Jackson, of the class of 1900, expanded this plan to include a memorial to the 264 Cornellians who had died in World War I.

The grand terrace was never realized amidst the Great Depression and World War II, and the plans scrapped owing to the rapid postwar expansion in enrollment.

The university also built or acquired a number of small residences in the area; it purchased the Central Avenue fraternity houses of Psi Upsilon and Sigma Phi fraternities to build Myron Taylor Hall (dedicated 1932), to be the home of the Cornell Law School, and built new houses for them on West Campus.

[6] These acquisitions accelerated after the war, with the university removing faculty housing and acquiring fraternities and other small living units around campus.

[8] Cascadilla Hall, the oldest building on campus, was renovated 1983–84, including the addition of a fifth floor, which increased its capacity from 144 beds to approximately 390.

This dinner occurs every Wednesday, starting at 6 PM, and houses set the tables with a more formal dining atmosphere and unique menus.

To the north and east of the houses lie the nine original West Campus residences, collectively known as the "Baker dormitories," after George Fisher Baker, the New York City banker who funded their construction, or as the "Gothic halls," reflecting their ivy-covered Collegiate Gothic architecture and construction of local bluestone trimmed in Indiana limestone.

They were designed by Chapman, Evans & Delehanty and Quinlivan, Pierik & Krause and constructed of utilitarian cinder block faced with brick.

[15] Although officially denied by Cornell, some claim that when constructed, they were intended to be temporary housing (as evidenced, for example, by the transitory fiberglass showers) until better structures could be built.

The larger Rose Scholars program requires residents to attend events hosted within and approved by the House on a weekly basis.

[27] Some students objected to the omission, and raised a fund to add his name; the university stationed a guard at the memorial to prevent his surreptitious addition.

The president of the university, Livingston Farrand, denied the appeal,[28] and in 1934 the funds were instead given to Kurt Lewin, acting professor of education and a refugee from the Third Reich.

[30] This building was demolished and in 2007 was replaced with the Noyes Community Recreation Center, which provides indoor athletic facilities located on Campus Road.

The University sought to replace the lost parking spaces by paving over the Redbud Woods, located on the gardens of the Treman estate.

Cornell West Campus as seen from McGraw Tower in May 2013
The War Memorial seen from a distance
Cascadilla Hall
The 1920s plans to expand the gothics
A postcard of Baker Tower
Detail of ornamentation on Founders Hall
One of the dormitory wings of Hans Bethe House (left) connected to a communal area (right). The house dining hall is located on the first floor of the structure on the right with lounges, meeting rooms, and study space filling the second floor of the structure.
The War Memorial and Hans Bethe House (in background)
The Gothics
Boldt Hall
Class of '18 Hall
Telluride House , which was placed on the National Register of Historic Places , houses a selective residential society on West Campus.
A 1900 postcard of Cornell's Chi Psi fraternity house
Llenroc , the Delta Phi fraternity house and former residence of Ezra Cornell
The War Memorial
Noyes Community Recreation Center
Ithaca City Cemetery