Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Eustace Hall

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Built
  
1888

Opened
  
1888

Added to NRHP
  
3 September 1971

NRHP Reference #
  
71000395

Area
  
4,000 m²

Eustace Hall httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Location
  
East Circle Drive, Michigan State University campus, East Lansing, Michigan

Architect
  
attributed to Liberty Hyde Bailey by NRHP and to William D. Appleyard by MSU

Similar
  
W J Beal Botanical Garden, Munn Ice Arena, Red Cedar River, Michigan State University, Eli and Edythe Broad Art

Eustace Hall located on Laboratory Row is the only building on Michigan State University's main campus in East Lansing, Michigan that is on the National Register of Historic Places. Designed in a mix of "Queen Anne massing, Richardsonian Romanesque features, and Shingle Style", it was built in 1888 as the Horticultural Laboratory Building. Its design has been variously attributed to noted MSU alumnus and noted horticulturist Liberty Hyde Bailey and to Lansing architect William Appleyard It housed the horticulture department until 1924 when a new horticulture building (now known as Old Horticulture) was opened. It then became the University College Building until 1961 when it was renamed for Harry J. Eustace who chaired the Horticulture Department from 1908 to 1918.

The third-oldest extant building on the MSU campus, it was listed on the Michigan Register of Historic Places on March 3, 1971 as the Horticultural Laboratory Building and was listed on the National Register on September 3, 1971 as Eustace Hall.

In 1999 Eustace Hall underwent a $3 million renovation funded in part by a major donation from MSU alumni Jeffrey N. Cole (BS, 1970) and Kathryn C. Cole (MBA, 1990) of Birmingham, Michigan and was renamed Eustace-Cole Hall in their honor. Eustace-Cole Hall now serves as the headquarters of the MSU Honors College.

References

Eustace Hall Wikipedia