Campus Buildings Directory
1535 W. 15th St. 66045-7608
This five-story building west of Naismith Drive and Murphy Hall opened for classes Oct. 17, 1977, and was dedicated Feb. 20-21, 1978. It retained the name of the 1905 hall built on Jayhawk Boulevard to house the School of Law and named in honor of Dean James W. “Uncle Jimmy” Green. It was designed by Lawrence R. Good and Associates of Lawrence; in 1987 former Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe donated “Tai Chi Figure,” a large sculpture by Zhu Ming near the hall’s entrance.
Green Hall houses the School of Law administrative and faculty offices; class and seminar rooms and moot courtrooms; the Legal Aid Clinic; Career Services and other student services; the Raymond F. Rice Reading Room; the Wheat Law Library; and the student publications Kansas Law Review and the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy.
This five-story building west of Naismith Drive and Murphy Hall opened for classes Oct. 17, 1977, and was dedicated Feb. 20-21, 1978. It retained the name of the 1905 hall built on Jayhawk Boulevard to house the School of Law and named in honor of Dean James W. “Uncle Jimmy” Green. It was designed by Lawrence R. Good and Associates of Lawrence; in 1987 former Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe donated “Tai Chi Figure,” a large sculpture by Zhu Ming near the hall’s entrance.
Green Hall houses the School of Law administrative and faculty offices; class and seminar rooms and moot courtrooms; the Legal Aid Clinic; Career Services and other student services; the Raymond F. Rice Reading Room; the Wheat Law Library; and the student publications Kansas Law Review and the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy.
View Photo Library images of Green Hall
See also: Lippincott Hall
525 W. 14th St. 66044-3401
This stone house, restored by Professor Richard L. Grider after a 1915 fire, is thought to have been owned first by Charles Robinson, a founder of Lawrence who owned much of the land that became the east end of campus. Although it has housed various programs, the house is now unoccupied.
Immediately south is the Burton House, 515-517 W. 14th St., a brick structure also owned by the university. Part of it is used by art students for studios and workshops.
This stone house, restored by Professor Richard L. Grider after a 1915 fire, is thought to have been owned first by Charles Robinson, a founder of Lawrence who owned much of the land that became the east end of campus. Although it has housed various programs, the house is now unoccupied.
Immediately south is the Burton House, 515-517 W. 14th St., a brick structure also owned by the university. Part of it is used by art students for studios and workshops.




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