The first building devoted entirely
to instruction in landscape architecture on the Cornell campus
was truly “for the birds.” Occupied in the late winter of 1913,
the building had originally been constructed by Ag students under
the direction of Professor James Rice, the founder of the Poultry
Department in the Ag School. Noted as the first structure in this
country devoted to the study of poultry science, the wooded frame
building, located on the present site of Rice Hall, was soon too
small to serve the educational needs of the rapidly expanding
department. Offered to the Department of Landscape Art, which
was looking for a permanent location on the Ag Quad, the building
was given with the instructions that it be moved and renovated
for no more than $3,000.
A new
location in a wooded area overlooking Beebe Lake (roughly on or
near the knoll behind Warren Hall and just northwest of the Deans’
Garden) was secured and the move was accomplished in the late
summer of 1912. Dean Liberty Hyde Bailey was adamant that the
building and department remain visible to the rest of the Ag School.
He observed: “This building should not be removed from the main
line of travel. I want all our people constantly aware of the
Department of Landscape Art; and I want the Department of Landscape
Art to exercise its continuing influence in College. The new building
ought to be placed where people will be passing it every day...”
(click image for larger view)
As with most projects, the remodeling work proceeded more slowly
and was more costly than had been anticipated. Intentions to move
in by the beginning of classes moved to Thanksgiving and finally
were not realized until early the next year. Once in, however,
the building seemed to answer many of the space issues which had
troubled the department throughout its early years of existence.
Writing in May 1914, Professor Eugene Montillion presented a glowing
description of what had been accomplished in the preceding months:
The Landscape Art Department occupies its own building, one recently
reconstructed for their use. The first floor accommodates (sic)
the Department offices and a lecture room seating seventy persons,
equipped with a stereoptican lantern. The second story is sixty
feet, which in addition to preceding accommodation (sic) for about
thirty-five students in design and other drafting courses, has
a section devoted to the work of planning the college campus,
over which the department has supervision. In the basement of
the building, the hillside site which allows ample light, is located
the department library and a large exhibition room for the hanging
and judgment of student problems in design and other courses and
the occasional placing of special exhibitions.
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(click image for larger view)
Beautiful as the accommodations were, the Department would enjoy
them for less than ten years. With the resignation of Dean Bailey
in 1913 and the changing of the old guard in the college administration,
the Department felt increasingly vulnerable to the possibility
of being phased out of the Ag School. Thus, when an opportunity
arose in the early 1920s to become part of the College of Architecture,
the Department moved to a new home down on the Arts Quad and vacated
the remodeled poultry building overlooking Beebe Lake.
---Daniel Krall