University of New Mexico. Dept. of Facility Planning.
The University of New Mexico is built in the Pueblo Revival Style of architecture, a style introduced to campus around 1901. Architect John Gaw Meem perpetuated the regional style, designing many buildings on the UNM campus, 1933-1959. In 1963, architect Van Dorn Hooker was appointed UNM's University Architect. After his retirement the Dept. of Facility Planning was established in 1988. The department oversees the master planning of the main and branch campuses of UNM, as well as general campus development. Other specific duties include the approval or disapproval of building designs and landscape projects, interviewing and recommending architects, and recommending decisions to the President. The department further oversees capital construction, facility planning management, disabled needs compliance, and space planning.
From the description of Architectural drawings, 1892-[ongoing]. (University of New Mexico-Main Campus). WorldCat record id: 53079604
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