University of Virginia Library

BUILDINGS

The buildings devoted wholly or in part to the work of the Department of
Engineering are the following:

The Mechanical Laboratory is the main seat of the instruction in technical


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studies. It is 180 by 70 feet and contains on the main floor the Dean's office
and the offices of three other professors; and three lecture-rooms.

Above are an office, a small drafting room for advanced students, and blueprint
and photographic rooms. Below on the ground floor are an office and
classroom, the electrical laboratories, the testing laboratories, apparatus and
storerooms, and the students' lavatory. In order to more adequately care for
increased numbers this building has undergone a considerable rearrangement
during recent years. Wood and machine shop equipment has been entirely
removed from the building, as well as the facilities for Freshman and Sophomore
Drawing. This change made available much needed classroom space
and allowed the electrical laboratories to be expanded. Incident to the changes
new cement floors were constructed for the Road Materials Testing Laboratory,
the main testing Laboratory and the main hall. A new high-pressure
steam line from the Power House was also installed.

The Shops are now temporarily housed in the Garage erected for the
Motor Truck Training Detachment during the World War. This building gives
a floor space of some 5,000 square feet and has allowed the rearrangement of
wood and machine shop equipment for group drive by four electric motors.
Space is also available in this structure for use in connection with the course
in automobile construction and testing.

The Drawing Room is temporarily housed near Peabody Hall in one of
the Barracks taken from the Training Camp site and rebuilt and fitted for
drawing. The building accommodates about 180 men, each man having his
individual drawing desk.

The Power House is a single-story building 110 by 40 feet. It contains the
University boiler plant and the electric lighting plant. The Boiler plant consists
of two horizontal return-tubular boilers, each of 140 horsepower. The
lighting plant consists of three electric generators directly connected to high-speed
engines, the respective capacities being 25, 50, and 75 kilowatts. The
whole plant is available for purposes of instruction, study and experiment.

In addition to the University plants there are available by courtesy of the
owners for purposes of inspection, study and tests such plants as the turbine
station and railway and power substation of the Virginia Public Service Company,
the water turbines and oil engine plant of the Charlottesville Woolen
mills, and plants of the local ice companies and cold storage.

The Geological Museum is 120 by 50 feet. It is a three-story building.
The main floor is devoted to the very extensive geological collection of specimens,
charts, relief maps, and so on. The gallery above contains an equally
good collection of minerals and numerous models of typical crystallographic
forms. The upper floor contains the lecture-rooms and the laboratories of
Economic Geology. In the basement are stored subsidiary collections and new
material accumulated in more recent geological surveys.

The Physical Laboratory faces the Mechanical Laboratory on the opposite
side of the quadrangle, and has almost the same proportions. The main floor
contains the lecture-room, the professors' offices, the laboratory of experimental
physics, and the storeroom for the very large collection of apparatus
used in the lectures. On the ground floor is the laboratory of theoretical electricity,


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the storage battery room, a well-equipped shop for the repair and
manufacture of apparatus, and smaller rooms for the work of graduate students.

The new Chemical Laboratory was opened for use in September, 1917.
In this fire-proof structure all the work in Chemistry is assembled. The floor
area provided is about 30,000 square feet. The lecture-rooms seat classes of
300, 75 and 25 students. The laboratories assigned to General Chemistry,
Organic Chemistry, Qualitative Analysis, Quantitative Analysis, and Physical
Chemistry contain 110, 60, 40, 30, and 20 desks. Altogether by dividing classes
into sections, 600 students may be accommodated. Smaller private laboratories
are provided for research workers. Large stock rooms communicating by elevators
with the several floors contain ample stores of chemical supplies. The
5,000 volumes of books and bound sets of journals constituting the Departmental
Library of Chemistry are so housed as to be accessible to both teachers
and students.