Hoover Tower Recognized for Preservation.News Editors/Assignment Desks STANFORD, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 19, 2004 The distinctive Hoover Tower Hoover Tower (called HooTow by contraction-happy students) is a 285-foot structure on the campus of Stanford University in Stanford, California. The tower is part of the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace, a research center founded by former U.S. , a landmark on the Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president. campus and part of the Hoover Institution The Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace is a public policy think tank and library founded by Herbert Hoover at Stanford University, his alma mater. The Institution was founded in 1919 and over time has amassed a huge archive of documentation related to President on War, Revolution and Peace, is being recognized by the Art Deco Society of California (ADSC ADSC Adobe Document Structuring Conventions ADSC Active Duty Service Commitment ADSC Address Status Changed ADSC Army Development and Selection Centre (UK MoD) ADSC Automatic Data Service Center ) with a 2004 Preservation Award. The award recognizes noteworthy preservation and restoration activities of buildings in California. In selecting recipients, ADSC considers the history, condition, and architectural style of the nominated buildings. "Stanford deserves praise for maintaining the building in pristine condition," said Paula Trehearne, preservation director for ADSC. Maintenance and upkeep of older buildings is unusual, she noted, because it's expensive and difficult. Hoover Tower, dedicated in 1941 to commemorate the university's fiftieth anniversary, houses the Hoover Institution Library, as well as the Herbert Hoover and Lou Henry Hoover exhibit rooms. Arthur Brown Jr Arthur Brown, Jr. (1874-1957) was an American architect, based in San Francisco. He graduated from the University of California, Berkeley in 1896, where he and his future partner, John Bakewell, Jr, were protégés of famed Bay Area architect Bernard Maybeck. ., perhaps the most celebrated architect of his time, designed the tower. In addition, he designed many buildings in the Bay Area including Coit Tower and San Francisco City Hall The City Hall of San Francisco California, opened in 1915, in its open space area in the city's Civic Center, is a Beaux-Arts monument to the brief "City Beautiful" movement that epitomized the high-minded American Renaissance of the period 1880-1917. ; in Washington, D.C., he designed the War Memorial Veterans Building and the Federal Triangle Buildings. The tower, measuring 285 feet, offers views of the surrounding area from its observation deck (open daily from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; closed during finals and academic breaks). Trehearne pointed out that the top of the tower was originally intended to be square but was changed to its present dome shape to accommodate its forty-eight-bell carillon carillon, in music: see bell. carillon Musical instrument consisting of at least 23 cast bronze bells tuned in chromatic order. Usually located in a tower, it is played from a keyboard. Most carillons encompass three to four octaves. . The carillon, cast for the Belgian Pavilion at the 1939-40 World's Fair, remained in this country owing to the outbreak of World War II. Later, the Belgian-American Education Foundation acquired it and donated it to the Hoover Institution in appreciation of Herbert Hoover's famine relief efforts during and after World War I. The inscription on the largest bell reads "For Peace Alone Do I Ring." The Art Deco Society of California honors the architectural and other aesthetic achievements of the period referred to as art deco, which covered the first half of the twentieth century, especially the decades of the 1920s, '30s, and '40s. The Hoover Institution, founded at Stanford University in 1919 by Herbert Hoover, who went on to become the 31st president of the United States The head of the Executive Branch, one of the three branches of the federal government. The U.S. Constitution sets relatively strict requirements about who may serve as president and for how long. , is an interdisciplinary research center for advanced study on domestic public policy and international affairs, with an internationally renowned archives. |
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