Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The College of Education Building, the second of four facilities at Wayne State University designed by world-renowned architect Minoru Yamasaki, gave “another touch of splendor to the urban campus,” The Detroit News wrote that day.

  2. The board of governors of Wayne State University appointed him as architect of the College of Education Building so that the main campus's first building would be worked out with those tenets in mind and designed specifically by him.

  3. The College of Education Building, constructed in 1960, is the second of four buildings that Minoru Yamasaki designed for the Wayne State campus. Located directly across Gullen Mall from the MacGregor Memorial Conference Center, the striking four-story white concrete structure is set on a platform and features narrow, pointed windows on all ...

  4. The four buildings at Wayne State University – the McGregor Memorial Conference Center (1958), the Education Building (1960), and the Prentis Building (1962-64) and DeRoy Auditorium (1962-64) make up a significant part of Wayne State’s campus. In addition to many campus buildings designed by architect Suren Pilafian, Yamasaki was the ...

    • Detroit Normal Training School
    • Detroit Teachers College
    • College of Education
    John Mahelm Berry Sill
    Amanda P. Funnelle, Founding Principal
    Harriet Maria Scott, Principal
    Oliver George Frederick, Principal
    Stuart Appleton Courtis, Dean
    Warren E. Bow, Dean
    Robert M. Magee, Acting Dean
    Francis C. Rosecrance, Dean
    J. Wilmer Menge, Dean
    John Williams Childs, Acting Dean
  5. Wayne State University’s College of Education building was Minoru Yamasaki’s second building on Wayne’s campus. It was built to house all components of the College of Education and showcased Yamasaki’s unique style of New Formalism.

  6. Mar 21, 2022 · The buildings that Yamasaki designed on campus were created at a pivotal moment in his career between 1958 and 1964: the McGregor Center, College of Education Building, DeRoy Auditorium and Prentis Building, according to the WSU Yamasaki Legacy website.

  1. People also search for