Difference between revisions of "Prentis Hall"
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[[File:Prentis.jpg|thumb|Prentis Hall in all its glory]] | [[File:Prentis.jpg|thumb|Prentis Hall in all its glory]] | ||
− | '''Prentis Hall''' is a building owned by Columbia on the south side of [[125th Street]], just across from the planned [[Manhattanville campus]]. It was built in [[1949]] as a milk bottling plant. Prentis currently houses some [[School of the Arts]] and [[Music Department]] studios as well as the offices of the [[Arts Initiative]]. Earlier, Columbia planned to [[School of the Arts Building|dramatically expand]] Prentis to fully house the School of the Arts, but new, more conservative plans only call for the addition of an extra floor by [[2015]]. | + | '''Prentis Hall''' is a building owned by Columbia on the south side of [[125th Street]], just across from the planned [[Manhattanville campus]]. It was built in [[1949]] as a milk bottling plant, and acquired by Columbia not long thereafter. From the 1950s on, it has housed the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center (now the [[Computer Music Center]]), which pioneered electronically synthesized music. |
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+ | Prentis currently houses some [[School of the Arts]] and [[Music Department]] studios as well as the offices of the [[Arts Initiative]]. Earlier, Columbia planned to [[School of the Arts Building|dramatically expand]] Prentis to fully house the School of the Arts, but new, more conservative plans only call for the addition of an extra floor by [[2015]]. | ||
[[Category:Buildings on the Manhattanville campus]] | [[Category:Buildings on the Manhattanville campus]] | ||
[[Category:School of the Arts]] | [[Category:School of the Arts]] |
Revision as of 01:14, 8 July 2010
Prentis Hall is a building owned by Columbia on the south side of 125th Street, just across from the planned Manhattanville campus. It was built in 1949 as a milk bottling plant, and acquired by Columbia not long thereafter. From the 1950s on, it has housed the Columbia-Princeton Electronic Music Center (now the Computer Music Center), which pioneered electronically synthesized music.
Prentis currently houses some School of the Arts and Music Department studios as well as the offices of the Arts Initiative. Earlier, Columbia planned to dramatically expand Prentis to fully house the School of the Arts, but new, more conservative plans only call for the addition of an extra floor by 2015.