Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

A nighttime view of 1940 and 1941 halls, two of the five dormitories in Butler College that were scheduled to be torn down this summer to make way for new residence halls. Before the last students moved out of the dorms, PAW asked Hyunseok Shim ’08, a photographer for The Daily Princetonian, to record the “New New Quad” in a series of images (below). Said Shim, who lived in 1942 Hall last year: “Personally, I’m glad that the Butler quad is going down.”

In June, the University was scheduled to raze portions of Butler College, including Lourie-Love Hall, left, 1941 Hall, right, and 1922 Hall, center, as well as 1940 Hall and 1942 Hall, not pictured. The five buildings cost $2.9 million to build, according to a news release from 1964, the year the quadrangle was completed.
Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

Rooms in the Butler dorms, like this single in 1942 Hall, included exposed-brick walls and distinctive waffle ceilings. A PAW story in October 1964 said that the single rooms were built "in accordance with the new preference for 'privatism.'"
Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

Detail of a waffle ceiling in 1942 Hall.
Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

Architect Hugh Stubbins, who also designed Jadwin Hall and Mudd Library, wrote that his Butler dorms were meant "to capture the traditional scale [of collegiate gothic architecture] in a modern idiom." For example, he used decorative metal parapets, like the ones lining the roof of Lourie-Love Hall, to evoke Gothic crenellations. Students dubbed them "bicycle racks."
Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

Some of the Butler buildings were given as memorials to class members, including those who died in World War II. The University plans to commemorate the gifts of the classes and of the Lourie and Love families in the new Butler complex and at the University Chapel.
Photos by Hyunseok Shim ’08

Robert Goheen '40 *48 is a member of the donor class for 1940 Hall, shown here at night, and was Princeton's president when the dorm was dedicated at the class’s 25th reunion in June 1965. William Meredith Jr. '40 wrote a quatrain for fallen classmates who died in World War II that was inscribed on a plaque at the building’s entrance: Living and dying they showed us a brave way./ Friends who remember them built this hall./ You who pass here and learn new selves today,/ Finding that study good, befriend us all.