Fresno City College Old Administration Building (Fresno, California)
USA /
California /
Fresno /
Fresno, California /
University Avenue, 1101
World
/ USA
/ California
/ Fresno
World / United States / California
administrative building, NRHP - National Register of Historic Places
George McDougall, Architect
Spanish Renaissance
National Register of Historic Places # 74000510
Description
The Fresno City College Old Administration Building, located on the west side of the college campus, is built of solid brick with tapestry face brick. The roof covering is mission clay tile. Among its decorative features are handmade hard-burned bricks, classic ornamentation at the main and secondary entrances, classic brick arches and stone balconies overlooking central courtyards, and lavish Moorish geometric details in brick on the east and west walls of the auditorium and above the arches of the covered walks around the perimeter of the courts.
In a statement prepared by the State Architect, George McDougall, in 1916, he noted that the sunny California climate was largely responsible for the remarkable open air features of the building's courtyards. He had decided, "to use brick and stone in warm shades and of a style reminiscent of the Renaissance architectures built with these materials in Northern Italy and Spain." While modern requirements had necessitated "a free translation of these styles," he had nevertheless introduced themes "recalling Spanish woodturning and Lombard brickwork." McDougall concluded that "we think the building of the Fresno Normal School is a distinct step in the advancement of school architecture in this state."
Historical significance
The Old Administration building is the only surviving complex remaining from the Fresno State Normal School, the first institution of higher education for the training of teachers in the San Joaquin Valley. Construction began in 1915 and was completed in 1916; it was the first permanent building on the campus. The building originally contained administrative offices, classrooms and a library on the second floor.
The Normal School developed into Fresno State Teacher's College in 1921, into Fresno State College in 1935, and into Fresno City College in 1956 when Fresno State College (now California State University, Fresno) moved to a new campus several miles to the north.
Adapted from the original National Register of Historic Places nomination, by Ephraim K. Smith. (See historicfresno.org/nrhp/fccadmin.htm)
Spanish Renaissance
National Register of Historic Places # 74000510
Description
The Fresno City College Old Administration Building, located on the west side of the college campus, is built of solid brick with tapestry face brick. The roof covering is mission clay tile. Among its decorative features are handmade hard-burned bricks, classic ornamentation at the main and secondary entrances, classic brick arches and stone balconies overlooking central courtyards, and lavish Moorish geometric details in brick on the east and west walls of the auditorium and above the arches of the covered walks around the perimeter of the courts.
In a statement prepared by the State Architect, George McDougall, in 1916, he noted that the sunny California climate was largely responsible for the remarkable open air features of the building's courtyards. He had decided, "to use brick and stone in warm shades and of a style reminiscent of the Renaissance architectures built with these materials in Northern Italy and Spain." While modern requirements had necessitated "a free translation of these styles," he had nevertheless introduced themes "recalling Spanish woodturning and Lombard brickwork." McDougall concluded that "we think the building of the Fresno Normal School is a distinct step in the advancement of school architecture in this state."
Historical significance
The Old Administration building is the only surviving complex remaining from the Fresno State Normal School, the first institution of higher education for the training of teachers in the San Joaquin Valley. Construction began in 1915 and was completed in 1916; it was the first permanent building on the campus. The building originally contained administrative offices, classrooms and a library on the second floor.
The Normal School developed into Fresno State Teacher's College in 1921, into Fresno State College in 1935, and into Fresno City College in 1956 when Fresno State College (now California State University, Fresno) moved to a new campus several miles to the north.
Adapted from the original National Register of Historic Places nomination, by Ephraim K. Smith. (See historicfresno.org/nrhp/fccadmin.htm)
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 36°46'3"N 119°47'52"W
- Kearney Park 12 km
- Manzanar National Historic Site 146 km
- Columbia State Historic Park 153 km
- Columbia, California 154 km
- Bodie State Historic Park 176 km
- Campo Seco 188 km
- Kennedy Mine 199 km
- Fiddletown, California 212 km
- Institute of Forest Genetics (Eddy Tree Breeding Station) 235 km
- Coloma, California 249 km
- Tower District 0.8 km
- Roeding 1.8 km
- Jane Addams Neighborhood 2.7 km
- Fig Garden 3.5 km
- Downtown Fresno 3.5 km
- Edison 6.5 km
- West Area Community 6.7 km
- Van Ness Extension/Bluffs 7.5 km
- Highway City 8.9 km
- Bullard 10 km