Buell Hall

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Buell Hall
Buell in its original location

Buell Hall (also known in the past as "College Hall", "Alumni House" and "East Hall"), is the only remaining building on the Morningside Heights campus that dates back to Columbia's predecessor on the site, the Bloomingdale Insane Asylum. Today Buell is better known as "Maison Française" as the French cultural house is the primary occupant of the building, though it shares the building with gallery space for GSAPP and GSAPP's Temple Hoyne Buell Center for the Study of American Architecture, which strangely has its office in Avery anyway.

Designed in 1885 and built with a gift from William H. Macy, Macy Villa, as it was originally called, was a residential facility for wealthy male insane people, so that they wouldn't have to mix with the hoi polloi in the more "institutional" main buildings. In the spring of 1895, Columbia's Crew team took possession of the Villa for their use.[1] Thereafter it housed Columbia College until Hamilton Hall's construction, and later was used to house the offices of the Bursar, the Registrar, Dean of the graduate faculties, Provost, Alumni Council, Committee on Employment for Students, and the Committee on Undergraduate Admissions. It also housed the Columbia University Press. As of at least 1912, the building was thought to be temporary.

Prior to the construction of Kent Hall, Buell actually sat on 116th street. It was physically moved back to make way for the new building, and in the process, the deep wooden porches that had surrounded the building were removed. Until 1964, Buell Hall housed offices of the School of General Studies.

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