OSU’s Strand Hall returns to its former glory
Strand Hall, the home of the Oregon State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences for the past century,
reopens Tuesday in Corvallis after a $25 million restoration project.
Portland architect Doug Reimer said it was the most enjoyable project he’s worked on in his 30-plus year career.
The work included extensive seismic stability and accessibility improvements. The latter included making bathrooms and four entrances accessible to people using wheelchairs, and adding an elevator that reaches the fourth floor. An older elevator reached only the third floor. The dean’s office was moved from the first floor to the fourth floor. The building’s wiring, sprinkler system, fire alarms and heating and cooling systems were renovated or updated throughout.
“It was pretty antiquated,” said one of the project leaders, Kevin Cady of Hoffman Construction in Portland.
The work may have accomplished something else: Restored the College of Ag to its central place on campus, as was intended in a 1909 master plan developed by famed landscape designer John Charles Olmsted. He was the nephew and adopted son of Frederick Nelson Olmsted, who designed New York’s Central Park.
The younger Olmsted’s campus design had Strand Hall facing east and west into both of OSU’s “quads,” the rectangular spaces criss-crossed by sidewalks, lined with graceful trees and bordering the Memorial Union, Kerr Library and other notable buildings.
Strand, designed by John Benes, was built in three phases in 1909, 1911, and 1913. Over time, however, the “double fronted” look and grandeur of Strand Hall diminished, said Reimer, the renovation project architect.
“As you can imagine, 100 years of remodeling has a tendency to mess up the original idea that the architect had,” Reimer said.
As administrators over the decades tried to squeeze in more offices, workers made such changes as narrowing the hallways and dropped ceilings.
“But it still had really good bones,” Reimer said. The characteristics uncovered and restored included high ceilings, generous corridors and tall windows, which let in a lot of natural daylight, he said.
The work reconnects with Olmsted’s campus vision, Reimer said.
“Dreamers and master planners, take heart,” he said, “because sometimes it takes 106 years to come true.”
In an OSU news release, ag college Dean Dan Arp said the work restored Strand “beyond its former glory.”
The two-year, $24.9 million project was paid for by a combination of state bonds and a state Energy Loan Program.
The reopening ceremony is at 3 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 27, at the building’s West Portico entrance, looking out upon the Memorial Union quad.