The Women's Building is the oldest patient dormitory, built in 1908 with a 1913 addition by Bergstrom and Carruth in the late Victorian Romanesque style.
[3] The original 1887 Building for Men was destroyed by fire, but the 1916 north wing addition by Bergstrom and Carruth remains.
The facility now houses the hospital's administration and planning offices, the library, and the occupational therapy department.
The reinforced concrete and steel building is faced with brick with stone-jointed stucco on secondary elevations.
A central hall runs the length of the building, flanked by large dormitory rooms.
[3] Designed by Dubois, the building was built in 1926 by George Whitemyer and Sons of Ogden, Utah.
Known as Lincoln, Platte and Washakie Halls, the L-shaped two-story building is designed in the Classical Revival style.
The interior is a central corridor arrangement with rooms in a variety of sizes to either side.
The 19,200 square feet (1,780 m2) building features cast stone columns and pilasters supporting a full entablature.