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Campus and Buildings
Belmont University
occupies a 62-acre campus in southeast Nashville at 16th Avenue
South and Wedgewood Avenue. Virtually all traffic skirts the campus
and thus allows a quiet, secluded environment. However, the campus
is conveniently situated near churches of all faiths, hospitals,
restaurants, shopping centers, and other universities. Buses of
the Metropolitan Transit Authority stop near the campus on their
frequent trips to and from the downtown area. Classes are located
in ten main buildings with the library and other facilities lying
in close proximity to the classrooms. Most buildings are recently
constructed or renovated. Major structures include:
Belmont Commons,
completed in 1994, provides 30 fully furnished, four-bedroom townhouses
each accommodating four residents. Preference is given to upperclass
students.
Belmont Heights
Baptist Church houses the undergraduate and graduate programs
of the School of Nursing in newly renovated facilities at the south
end of campus.
Belmont Little
Theatre, located in Hail Hall, is the performance and production
lab for the Belmont Theatre and Drama Department. The theatre sponsors
a minimum of four main stage productions a year all of which are
open to the campus and Nashville community.
Belmont Mansion
was built c1852 as part of the Belle Monte estate owned by Joseph
Alexander Smith Acklen and Adelicia Hayes Acklen. It serves the
university as a social center and is maintained as a historical
museum by the Belmont Mansion Association.
Bruin Hills,
remodeled in 1995, includes 116 unfurnished two bedroom and one
bath apartments.
Lila D. Bunch
Library, completed in the summer of 1993, is located on the
west side of Belmont Boulevard. It houses four floors of resources,
seating for 525 students, a circulation lobby, a reference/periodical
wing, a microcomputer center, an instructional technology laboratory,
a multimedia hall, an education services center, a music services
center, a listening/viewing center, three special collection rooms,
four group study rooms, two group listening/viewing rooms, and two
atriums.
Center for
Music Business, a 9,000-square-foot facility completed in 1993,
houses the recording studios and writer rooms for the Curb School
of Music Business. It is located on the lower level of the Massey
Business Center.
The Communication
Arts Center, houses faculty offices, administrative offices,
and classrooms for the Departments of Broadcasting and Video Production,
Communication Studies and Journalism.
Fidelity
Hall built in 1905, renovated 1986, houses offices for the Director
of Athletics, V.P. for Finance and Operations, Chancellor, Human
Resources, and faculty offices and classrooms for the School of
Religion, Department of Philosophy, and the Honors Program.
Freeman Hall,
an original academic building built in 1890, renovated in 1986,
houses offices for the President, V.P. for University Relations
(including Corporation/Foundation Relations, Donor Records, and
Alumni), V.P for Administration and Planning (including Admissions,
Registrar, Belmont Central, Student Financial Services), V.P. and
General Counsel, and the V.P. of Planned Giving and Church Relations.
Gabhart Student
Center houses the dining hall, bookstore, lounge, university
food court, racquetball court, guest rooms, Safety and Security
operational headquarters, Auxiliary Services, Conference Services,
student services offices, Career Services, international student
office, student government offices, Office of Residence Life, 25+
lounge and the faculty and staff dining room. This 44,000 square-foot
facility opened in 1981.
Grigsby
Memorial Campus Ministries Center houses the Baptist Student
Union, Rafters, and other campus ministry activities. This historic
building, renovated in 1964 and 1982, originally was the barn which
housed the fine riding horses owned by Ward-Belmont School. The
Rafters was completed in 1994.
Hail Residence
Hall provides spaces for male and female students.
Heron Residence
Hall provides 100 spaces for male students. The lower level
of Heron, restored and remodeled in 1996, houses the Department
of Broadcasting and Video Production with radio studio and control
room, classrooms and faculty offices.
The Hillside,
completed in 1998, provides 256 fully furnished, two and four bedroom
apartments. Preference is given to upperclassmen.
Hitch Science
Center houses offices, classrooms and laboratories for biology,
chemistry, computer science, mathematics, and physics. The building
was completed in 1974.
Leu Art Gallery,
located at the front entrance of the Lila D. Bunch Library, showcases
during the fall and spring semesters the works of local and regional
artists. The gallery, completed in 1994, also houses a permanent
collection of art reference books.
Leu Center
for the Visual Arts, completed in 1999, is a 40,000 square foot
state of the art facility housing studios for drawing, painting,
printmaking, ceramics, sculpture, and photography as well as a graphics
lab with 20 Macintosh workstations. The facility also houses a student
gallery, a 118-seat audio/visual room and faculty/staff offices.
Maddox Residence
Hall provides 150 spaces for female students.
Massey Business
Center, encompassing 115,000 square feet, was completed in 1990.
It includes the renovated historic Founders Hall, renamed Barbara
Massey Hall, and the Harris B. and Doris J. Massey Hall. The Center
houses classrooms, faculty offices, College of Business Administration
and Jack C. Massey Graduate School of Business Administration offices,
the Center for Music Business, the Center for Family Business, the
Center for Quality, the Frist Center, study lounges, seminar rooms,
conference rooms, dining rooms, and a convenience store. A state-of-the-art
learning center includes five computer labs. It also houses offices
for the Provost.
Massey Performing
Arts Center was renovated during 1997 to provide an exceptional
multi-purpose performance setting. The upper level of the building
contains Massey Concert Hall which seats approximately 1000. The
lower level of the building, also newly renovated, contains Harton
Recital Hall, music offices/studios, classrooms, practice rooms,
the Belmont Academy, and dressing rooms. It is joined to the Sam
A. Wilson Music Building by an open courtyard.
Pembroke
Residence Hall provides 143 spaces for male students.
Percussion
Studio houses instructional space, practice rooms, and faculty
offices for School of Music percussion study.
Physical
Education Building houses the 2,800-seat Striplin Gymnasium
as well as classrooms and offices for the physical education faculty.
A Wellness Center with state-of-the-art exercise equipment and walking
track is maintained in the Belmont Heights Baptist Church Family
Life Center, adjacent to the campus.
The Physical
Therapy Facility, located on 15th and Delmar, is the temporary
site for the Master of Physical Therapy Program. The 18,000-square-foot
facility houses the faculty and administrative offices. In addition
there are two classrooms, four laboratories, and four seminar/conference
rooms. Approximately 1300 square feet is dedicated to an outpatient
faculty practice clinic.
Safety and
Security Building, built around the turn of the century, was
originally a carriage house. Operational headquarters are located
in the Gabhart Student Center.
The Special
Emphasis Houses are homes located at 1508, 1512, 1513 and 1524
Compton Avenue. These houses offer students study outside the classroom
in various academic areas.
Student Health
Services is located adjacent to the School of Nursing facilities
at Belmont Heights Baptist Church. The Tower was built c1852 to
serve as a water tower on part of the Belle Monte estate owned by
Joseph Alexander Smith Acklen and Adelicia Hayes Acklen. In 1973,
the ground level was restored and houses a prayer chapel. In 1986,
a 23-bell carillon was installed.
Wheeler Humanities
Building houses offices and classrooms for the Departments of
Education, Literature and Language, History, Political Science,
Psychology, Sociology, and Social Work. The building was completed
in 1975.
Wilson Music
Building, completed in 1994, contains the College of Visual
and Performing Arts offices, School of Music faculty studios/offices,
and instructional/rehearsal space. The lower level of this three-floor
structure houses practice rooms, a piano lab, and two music technology
labs.
Wright Residence
Hall provides 201 spaces for female students.
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