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Hearst Mining Building

Hearst Memorial Mining Building
Hearst Mining Building.jpg
Hearst Mining building in 2005
Hearst Memorial Mining Building is located in Oakland, California
Hearst Memorial Mining Building
Hearst Memorial Mining Building is located in California
Hearst Memorial Mining Building
Hearst Memorial Mining Building is located in the US
Hearst Memorial Mining Building
Location Oxford St., Berkeley, California
Coordinates 37°52′28″N 122°15′22″W / 37.87444°N 122.25611°W / 37.87444; -122.25611Coordinates: 37°52′28″N 122°15′22″W / 37.87444°N 122.25611°W / 37.87444; -122.25611
Area 1.4 acres (0.57 ha)
Built 1907
Architect John Galen Howard
Architectural style Classical Revival
MPS Berkeley, University of California MRA
NRHP Reference # 82004646
BERKL # 152
Significant dates
Added to NRHP March 25, 1982
Designated BERKL February 25, 1991

The Hearst Memorial Mining Building at the University of California, Berkeley, is home to the university's Materials Science and Engineering Department, with research and teaching spaces for the subdisciplines of biomaterials; chemical and electrochemical materials; computational materials; electronic, magnetic, and optical materials; and structural materials. The Beaux-Arts-style Classical Revival building is listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is designated as part of California Historical Landmark #946. It was designed by John Galen Howard, with the assistance of the UC Berkeley-educated architect Julia Morgan and the Dean of the College of Mines at that time, Samuel B. Christy. It was the first building on that campus designed by Howard. Construction began in 1902 as part of the Phoebe Hearst campus development plan. The building was dedicated to the memory of her husband George Hearst, who had been a successful miner.

From 1998 to 2003, the building underwent a massive renovation, expansion, and seismic retrofit, in which a platform was built underneath the building, and a suspension system capable of up to 1 meter lateral travel was installed. To keep the expansion distinct from the historic building, shot peened aluminium (rather than stone) and a more modern design were used in the new construction.


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