Roberts Hall (Ithaca, New York)

Roberts Hall
Location: Cornell University campus, Ithaca, New York
Built: 1906
Architect: Heins,George L.; Kantrowitz,Morris
Architectural style: Beaux Arts, Renaissance
Governing body: State
MPS: New York State College of Agriculture TR
NRHP Reference#: 84003191
Added to NRHP: September 24, 1984[1]

Roberts Hall is a building on the Ag Quad of Cornell University, and is the second building of that name. The original Roberts Hall was built in 1906, and was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1984.[1][2] The 1906-built Roberts Hall was demolished before the construction of the new building and Kennedy Hall.[3] The current building holds many of the administrative offices of the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences[4] and Cornell's landscape architecture program.

The 1906 building is still listed on the National Register, apparently erroneously as the building is no longer there. East Robert Hall and Stone Hall are two other former Cornell University buildings that were and are similarly listed.

In 1973, Franzen and Associates, the architechtural firm that was designing Cornell's statutory college buildings at that time, conducted a study indicating that Roberts, East Roberts, Stone, Caldwell and Comstock Halls were unsafe and should be condemned. Franzen concluded that it would cost $14 million to renovate the five buildings and that it would be cheaper to tear them down and replace them with new buildings, presumably designed by Franzen. (Ironically, as of 2010, Caldwell and Comstock Halls are still in use, but another Franzen-designed building, the north wing of Martha Van Ressensaler Hall, had to be demolished as structurally unsound.) By 1978, the cost of demolishing the five buildings and building two replacements had escallated to $18 million. In response, two groups, Historic Ithaca and a student-group called the "Ag Quad Preservation Society" applied to list the five buildings on the National Register and sought to protect them under a newly-enacted Ithaca historic preservation ordinance. Just before Historic Ithaca could gain a court injunction to stop the demolition of Roberts, East Roberts and Stone Halls, Cornell began the demolition. [5] The State of New York renovated Caldwell and sold Comstock back to Cornell for use as a computer center.

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