LaFortune Student Center

The LaFortune Student Center serves as one of two student centers at the University of Notre Dame (the other being Duncan Student Center). Commonly known as "LaFortune" or "LaFun," it is a 4-story building of 83,000 square feet[3] that provides the Notre Dame community with a meeting place for social, recreational, cultural, and educational activities.[4] The building also houses restaurants from national restaurant chains.[5] As of 2008, LaFortune employs 35 part-time student staff and 29 full-time non-student staff and has an annual budget of $1.2 million.[3] Many businesses, services, and divisions of The Office of Student Affairs[4] are found within.

LaFortune Student Center
LaFortune Student Center
Map
General information
StatusStudent Center
Architectural styleEclectic, French Second Empire style, Neo Romanesque, Neoclassical
Town or cityNotre Dame, Indiana
CountryUnited States
Completed1883
ClientUniversity of Notre Dame
OwnerUniversity of Notre Dame
Technical details
Floor count4
Floor area83,000 sq ft (7,700 m2)
Design and construction
Architect(s)W.J. Edbrooke
Website
lafortune.nd.edu
LaFortune Student Center
LaFortune Student Center is located in Indiana
LaFortune Student Center
Coordinates41°42′06.9″N 86°14′17.9″W / 41.701917°N 86.238306°W / 41.701917; -86.238306
Built1883[1]
ArchitectWilloughby J. Edbrooke[1]
Architectural styleModern Gothic[2]
Part ofUniversity of Notre Dame: Main and South Quadrangles (ID78000053)
Added to NRHPMay 23, 1978

History edit

Science Hall (1883-1952) edit

Built as the Science Hall in 1883 under the direction of Fr. John Zahm, the head of the college of science, and architect Willoughby J. Edbrooke. The cornerstone, which was laid on June 20, 1883, by Rev. John Ambrose Watterson, was donated by Dr. John Cassidy, Notre Dame's first science graduate in 1865, and contained “lucid and colored quartz pebbles, and was procured in northern Michigan”.[6][7] President Thomas E. Walsh formally opened the building on December 14, 1884.[8]

The original building was 80 by 100 feet and was made up by two stories plus a basement. Architecturally, it was designed in an eclectic mixture of French Second Empire style and Neo Romanesque with some neoclassical elements such as Ionic columns of the little portico and a somewhat classical cornice with a dentil course below the soffit.[6][9][10][11] The basement housed the engine-room, the department of mechanical engineering, storage chemicals storage, and the metallurgical laboratory. The first floor housed the department of Physics and Chemistry, and a part of a museum. In the back of the museum was the grand staircase leading to the second floor, where the rest of the museum was housed, containing showcase cabinets of natural history, geology, mineralogy, botany, antiquities, and more. The rest of the second floor contained lecture rooms for the geology and mineralogy on the south side and of those for botany, physiology, and zoology on the north.[10]

In 1924 architecture professors Vincent Fagan and Francis Kervick designed an addition to the east side of the building and construction started in June, with the project completed in time for the opening of classes in the fall.[12] The addition contained 24 classrooms and laboratories and was designed to fit into the architectural style of the original building.[13]

In the mid-1930s, Notre Dame built its first particle accelerator in the basement of Cushing Hall, but this instrument was not powerful enough and the university contracted to purchase an eight-million-volt machine in 1940. A vault in the basement of the Science Hall to host such machine and was completed in 1941. When installed, it was the largest particle accelerator built to date and it was on-line by the time the United States entered World War II. In 1924, the Manhattan Project took over the operation of Notre Dame's accelerator, nicknamed the "atom smasher".[14][15]

Student Center (1952-) edit

When the new and larger Nieuwland Hall of Science was completed in 1952, the building was converted to a student union building and named LaFortune Center, after Joseph LaFortune, an oil executive from Tulsa, Oklahoma, who donated $135,000. The renovation was directed by architecture professors Frank Montana and Robert Schultz. The new student center featured a main ball room upstairs, a lower lounge, ten meeting rooms, a television room, a movie theatre, the manager ' s office, offices for the Student Senate and offices for the Vice President in Charge of Student Affairs, game rooms, and offices for Campus Clubs. The official opening took place at 1953 homecoming weekend and featured the Sophomore cotillion September 23.[16][17]

The 1924 addition continued to be used by the science department until 1956. The LaFortune family gave an additional $125,000 for the additional renovation, which featured offices for Scholastic and Dome offices, a second-floor lounge, basement recreation rooms and the new Huddle, which previously was located in Washington Hall annex and opened in its new location on Tuesday, February 26, 1957.

Thanks to an additional gift of $450,000 from the LaFortune estate, the Student Center underwent renovations between 1973 and 1977, which included additional space for food services, and remodeling of the basement and other social areas, and the addition of air conditioning. In 1986, another gift from the LaFortunes permitted the addition of the east wing of the building, facing Nieuwland Hall.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Official Building Inventory" (PDF). Facilities Design and Operations. University of Notre Dame. October 1, 2013. Retrieved May 15, 2014.
  2. ^ "History of Washington Hall at the University of Notre Dame". Notre Dame Washington Hall Staff. University of Notre Dame.
  3. ^ a b "Union Spotlight: LaFortune Student Center at the University of Notre Dame". Association of College Unions International. September 2008.
  4. ^ a b "Lafortune Student Center". Student Activities Office. Archived from the original on December 7, 2009. Retrieved November 25, 2009.
  5. ^ "Seen and heard on the Notre Dame campus". Notre Dame Magazine. Winter 2006–2007.
  6. ^ a b Howard, Timothy Edward (1907). A History of St. Joseph County, Indiana. Lewis publishing Company. p. 672.
  7. ^ Scholastic, 16 June 1883, p. 636
  8. ^ “Local Items,” Scholastic, 20 Dec. 1884, p. 256
  9. ^ Charleton, James H. (1986). Recreation in the United States: National Historic Landmark Theme Study. National Park Service, Department of the Interior. p. 117.
  10. ^ a b Local Items,” Scholastic, 16 June 1883, p. 632-33
  11. ^ Schlereth, Thomas J. (1976). The University of Notre Dame : a portrait of its history and campus. Notre Dame, Indiana. ISBN 0-268-01905-3. OCLC 1974264.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  12. ^ “Science Hall,” Notre Dame Scholastic magazine, May 1924, p. 283
  13. ^ “ND Architecturally,” Notre Dame Alumnus magazine, October 1924, p. 1-6.
  14. ^ Archives, AuthorNotre Dame (August 5, 2011). "The Issue of the Atomic Bomb". Notre Dame Archives News & Notes. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
  15. ^ Archives, AuthorNotre Dame (October 13, 2011). "Atom Smashers at Notre Dame". Notre Dame Archives News & Notes. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
  16. ^ “Buddy Morrow, New Student Center Combine For Soph Cotillion ‘Fashioned in Fantasy,’” Scholastic, 23 Oct. 1953, p. 9, 32
  17. ^ Modern, Functional Designs Accent Center, Furnish Facilities for Future Student Affairs,” Scholastic, 6 Nov. 1953, p. 10.
  18. ^ "History // LaFortune Student Center // University of Notre Dame". LaFortune Student Center. Retrieved July 21, 2022.