| Spaulding Quadrangle |
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| Facility: |
SPLDNG |


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| Number: |
A146 |
| Function: |
Dorm |
| Gross Square Feet: |
145,329 |
| Construction Cost: |
$1,639,000 |
| Completed: |
September, 1974 |
| Architect: |
Davis, Brody, and
Assoc. of NYC;
Milstein, Wittek, Davis Assoc. of Buffalo |
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| OCCUPANTS |
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Anthropology
Campus Parking and Transportation
University Residence Halls
University Police
Residence Life - Administration
Custodial Residential - North
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| FUNCTION |
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| The Ellicott Complex is a 38-building mega-structure
consisting of dormitories, dining facilities, academic departments, administrative
offices, and classrooms. It was designed to house 3,200 students in the
British university system style, with six 'quads' that would focus on subject
matter and include faculty as residents, tied to each other by an academic
and service core. This system has been abandoned, and various academic
departments have relocated to Ellicott as space demands necessitated. Ellicott
is notorious for its serpentine corridors and multiple pathways. The Katherine Cornell Theatre, located in the MFAC core, is named for a
well know Buffalo actress. It has long been the location for taping of
shows by political satirist, Buffalo-born Mark Russell. |
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| NAMESAKE |
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Elbridge Gerry Spaulding (1809-1897) was a
lawyer, real estate developer, and politician. He served as a mayor of
Buffalo and as a New York State assemblyman, congressman, and State Treasurer. Convinced of the possibilities of Buffalo's development, he was to live there for the rest of his life. In his inaugural address, Mayor Spaulding devoted the main part of his remarks to the condition of the Buffalo harbors and shipping facilities. He also alluded at length to the need for a comprehensive sewer system and to the need for proper lighting and paving of the streets, and heartily approved of the free school system.
When the University of Buffalo was formed in 1846, he was a member of the original council, and was still a member when he died in 1897.
Joseph Ellicott (1760-1826), the first resident agent
of the Holland Land Company, surveyed the Western New York wilderness
in 1798. Ellicott was an early advocate of the Erie Canal. He also
mapped out a radial-on-grid plan for the city of Buffalo, similar in
design to the earlier plan for Washington, D.C.
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| Modified
February 14, 2006 4:18 PM
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