Durfee Hall

Durfee Hall

Stone facade of Durfee Hall from Old Campus lawn

Durfee Hall from the southwest
General information
Architectural style High Victorian Gothic
Town or city New Haven, Connecticut
Country United States
Coordinates 41°18′35″N 72°55′41″W / 41.309648°N 72.928086°W / 41.309648; -72.928086Coordinates: 41°18′35″N 72°55′41″W / 41.309648°N 72.928086°W / 41.309648; -72.928086
Completed 1871
Renovated 1977[1]
Cost $130,000[2]
Client Yale University
Technical details
Floor count 5
Floor area 43,805[1]
Design and construction
Architect Russell Sturgis, Jr.
Renovating team
Architect Edward Larrabee Barnes
Other information
Number of rooms 40

Durfee Hall is a freshman residential dormitory on the Old Campus of Yale University. Built in 1871, it is the second oldest residential building at Yale, only after Farnam Hall. Currently, the building is used to house first-year students of Morse College, who stay there for the duration of their freshman year before moving into Morse College proper.

History

Durfee Hall was completed in 1871 under the direction of Russell Sturgis, Jr. (M.A., Honorary, Yale University, 1872) and received its name from the generous Yale benefactor Bradford M. C. Durfee, Esq., of Fall River, Massachusetts.[3] It was the second of a set of three buildings Sturgis designed that include Farnam Hall and Battell Chapel,[4] and was originally described simply as "large and costly."[5] However, it was quickly recognized as the defining piece of architecture on Yale's campus, and by the late 19th century, it was referred to by the New York Times as "the centre of wealth at Yale" [6] and as "one of the finest college dormitories in the United States."[7]

Design and Layout

Durfee Hall is composed of communal suites designed to house between six and nine students each. Each suite contains a central common room from which bedrooms, hallways, and private bathrooms branch off. 80% of the rooms in Durfee are singles—the highest percentage of singles in any freshman housing. The suites are positioned around five stairwells open to the Old Campus yard, three of which have access to the fifth floor. The suites are designed with a unique walk-through layout that allows residents to pass through unlocked suites from one end of the building to another without descending the stairwell. Most suites are also positioned between two of the stairwells, and have access to both.

The exterior of Durfee is covered in a combination of sandstone and bluestone, and is accentuated with gables, ornate turrets, and large brick chimneys. Upon its completion, it was considered a "high point in Victorian Gothic Style architecture," and critics from American Architect and Building News commented that "It will be a long time before the quiet dignity of its roof and chimneys will be surpassed anywhere."[8] More recently, the exterior was renovated by Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates Inc.

Amenities

The first four floors of the building all have twelve-foot ceilings and wood-paneled walls. All common rooms have two windows facing Old Campus and a fireplace, as do the oversized doubles. The majority of the building's singles face Elm Street and Cross Campus, and almost all of them have walk-in closets. The fifth floor of the building, which is lit primarily by skylight, has four connected suites with expansive common rooms. Like most freshman housing on Old Campus, there are no overhead lights inside the suites of Durfee Hall.

Durfee is also positioned above Durfee Sweet Shop, the principal school-owned late-night convenience and snack store. Next door is the Yale Women's Center, also located in the basement of Durfee.

Other

Pop Culture

The fictional characters Rory Gilmore and Paris Geller, from the hit TV series Gilmore Girls, lived in Durfee Hall as freshmen.[9]

Scenes from the Fox TV series Fringe (aired October 14, 2008) that were purported to be of Harvard's campus are actually filmed at Yale; Durfee Hall is plainly visible in the background.

CNN anchor Anderson Cooper lived on the first floor of Durfee Hall during his freshman year in suite D11.[10]


References

  1. 1 2 "Facilities Building Information". Yale University Office of Facilities. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
  2. Welch, Lewis Sheldon; Camp, Walter (1899). Yale, Her Campus, Class-rooms, and Athletics. Boston: L.C. Page & Company. p. 433. line feed character in |title= at position 19 (help)
  3. Catalogue of the Officers and Graduates of Yale University
  4. http://www.yale.edu/architectureofyale/Lawrance.html
  5. Lamb's Biographical Dictionary of the United States, Volume 2
  6. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9D05E3DF1031E033A25752C2A9679C94629ED7CF
  7. Appleton's Cyclopaedia of American Biography, Volume 2
  8. http://www.wje.com/projects/detail.php?pid=2006.4559.0
  9. http://www.tv.com/gilmore-girls/the-lorelaisand039-first-day-at-yale/episode/264249/summary.html
  10. Cowen, Alison Leigh; Walter, David (27 May 2010). "Dorm Rooms With Bragging Rights". New York Times. Retrieved 6 June 2014.
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