ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú

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A Site for the Sciences

 by Whitney Hale

(Oct. 29, 2013) â€” In celebration of the ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú's upcoming sesquicentennial in 2015, the 68th of 150 weekly installments on the university looks back at the construction of the .

On Nov. 11, 1960, construction began on the ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú-Physics Building. The current site of the building once was occupied by the president’s garden and tennis courts. 

ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú-Physics Building once occupied 33,600 square feet of  and  used 41,500 square feet in  and an additional 3,600 square feet in an old wooden barracks. The new ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú-Physics Building provided three times the space for the two departments.

The building was also outfitted for numerous special research facilities. The silo at the northeast corner of the building was designed to house a 5.5 million volt Van de Graff electrostatic nuclear accelerator. It has an internal diameter of 30 feet, it rises 58 feet above the ground and extends below ground for 13 feet. The concrete walls are two feet thick and two underground laboratories are connected to the silo.

The ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú-Physics Building was completed in April 1963 at a total cost of $6,084,076. It has four floors and a basement for a total of 244,000 square feet. 

The facilities were built for physics to have: two lecture halls with 200 seats each; eight classrooms with 40 seats each; 20 faculty offices; seven faculty office/laboratories; and labs for graduate and professional research. 

ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú's facilities were to have: a 270 seat lecture room; a 200 seat seminar room; three smaller lecture rooms with 150 seats each; nine classrooms with 49 seats each; 15 instructional labs accommodating 48 students each; 12 faculty offices; and 15 faculty office/laboratories. Department of Physics and Astronomy operated a full-time glassblower

The total space accommodated 4,800 students. A central library was built to house 50,000 volumes with 90 seats.

Housing physics and chemistry together was meant to assure greater capabilities for both departments at a time when it was becoming clear that the basic sciences were interdependent. When the building was opened the Department of ÌÇÐÄvlog¹Ù·½Èë¿Ú employed a full-time glassblower while the Department of Physics and Astronomy had an instrument shop under supervision of a machinist and each was able to draw upon the resources of the other.

This story on UK's history is presented by . Special Collections is home to  collection of rare books, Kentuckiana, the , the , the  and the . The mission of Special Collections is to locate and preserve materials documenting the social, cultural, economic and political history of the Commonwealth of Kentucky.