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Princeton Architectural Press will be publishing Marlene Heck’s Dartmouth Campus Guide, with photos by college photographer Joseph Mehling: at Amazon during February.

[Updated 07.12.2005: The press since has withdrawn plans to publish Marlene Heck’s text, and it appears in the out-of-stock list of Princeton Architectural Press.]

[Updated 07.30.2006: The press states that the book has been canceled.]

[Updated 11.17.2007: The press will publish a campus guide in 2008.

The note above was posted on July 28, 2002 in: All News, History, Publications

Agreement with the Dresden School Board: high school stays, Dartmouth gets playing fields on Reservoir Road and Howe Library parking lot.

The note above was posted on July 28, 2002 in: All News, Hanover/Leb./Nor'ch., Master Planning

This page redesigned.

The note above was posted on July 28, 2002 in: All News, Site Updates

 
 

[RSS 2.0]   This site presents one view of the architecture of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, U.S.A. The site began with some essays in May 1995 and incorporated the buildings catalog in 1996 and the Rich thesis in June, 1998. (The site was known as DArch initially and was renamed for an abbreviation of the word "Dartmouth.")

The campi of Columbia, Stanford and Amherst are the subjects of readily-available books, but no detailed architectural history of the country's fifth-oldest campus has been written. Dartmouth hosts the important collegiate grouping of Dartmouth Row and comprises some of the largest accumulations of the work of three American architects: Ammi Burnham Young, Charles Alonzo Rich and Jens Fredrick Larson. The campus currently is expanding in a fashion that is self-consciously traditional, which only enhances the need for information about its historic buildings.

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©1995-2007 Scott Meacham
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