Hardin
Hall, originally built in 1890 to serve as the chemistry
building, was named for
Mark Bernard Hardin, Clemson's first professor of chemistry
and acting president in 1897, 1899 and 1902. In 1946, Hardin
Hall was almost destroyed by fire, and its gabled roof was
replaced with a flat roof, which remained until the building's
restoration in 2002. Since
its construction in 1890, two restoration additions -- in
1900 and in 2002 -- have
been made, giving Hardin Hall a three-part architecture.
As a result, the façade contains brick from three
centuries, yet the completed restoration brings these eras
together into a unified whole.
Along with familiar brick walls
spanning three centuries, Hardin Hall now features "smart
classrooms" with the latest technology for interactive
teaching and learning.
Hardin Hall's renovators also
re-created a window to Clemson's past -- a single historic
classroom with wainscoting, blackboards, hardwood floors
and well-worn oak desks carefully restored.
"Hardin Hall is a symbol
of the University's proud past, its dynamic present and Clemson's
challenging vision for the future," says Janice Schach,
dean of the College of Architecture, Arts and Humanities.
Click here to see
Hardin
Hall location on campus map.
Click here to see
written
directions to Hardin Hall. |



|