Kingman Hall

Kingman Hall is located at 1730 La Loma Avenue near the northeast corner of the University of California, Berkeley campus.

[2] The house at 1730 La Loma Avenue was designed by the San Francisco architects Charles Drysdale and Harry Thomsen, Jr.

[3] The Nu chapter of Theta Xi resided there until 1964, when the fraternity was disbanded owing to anti-Greek sentiment on the Berkeley campus.

A 52-hour morning-noon-and-night group workshop, designed by Keyes, offered the opportunity for a breakthrough toward higher consciousness.

The center's brochure stated:We use simple living arrangements in which the participants of the Intensive sleep on a carpeted floor of a large room.

[2] As with the house under Mefford, Toad Hall was a major irritant to its neighbors, and complaints were regularly filed with the city.

In 1976, the center approached the city of Berkeley with an offer to donate the property for park use, if it could be determined that it was located on the Hayward Fault line.

[6] In addition there is a restaurant sized kitchen, a large dining room, as well as a roof deck and an outdoor amphitheater.