| Brief History: |
The postwar enrollment boom illustrated the need for new men's housing. To keep up
with demand, Moody Avenue was closed between University and Hurt streets, and a new men's
residence hall was built almost atop the old street in 1951. It was designed to housed 150
students and contained the Student Recreation Center, sometimes referred to as "the
Wagon Wheel." The structure was conceived to have symetrical wings running at
right angles to its ends, but only part of one wing on the north was ever built. On
December 5, 1966, the building was officially dubbed Browning Hall in honor of Governor
Gordon Browning. Between 1967 and 1973 the building was used as both a women's and men's
dormitory. In 1975, the building was converted from a dormitory into offices and
classrooms. Two years later the Business Administration Department relocated to Browning
Hall from the Hall-Moody Administration Building. The name was changed from Browning Hall
to the Business Administration Building in 1990. At present it houses the College of
Business and Public Affairs. |