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Wren building
Wren building






wren building
  1. WREN BUILDING PDF
  2. WREN BUILDING WINDOWS

Preservation architects with the firm of Mesick Cohen Wilson Baker Architects have worked with many of them, and they will also work on this project.īecause of safety concerns, no one has yet been inside of the drain, but Kern expects the preservation architects may use technology like laser scanning to explore the structure and its stability. (WYDaily/Courtesy of Stephen Salpukas)Ī number of other 18th-century historic sites in Virginia also have vaulted drains. Susan Kern kneels next to a door that hides an opening to the drain in the Wren Building basement. Several vaulted drains run under the streets of Colonial Williamsburg’s historic area, near the center of town by the magazine. When the access point was discovered and drain exposed, Kern sought the help of archaeologists and architects who have worked with similar structures in the past, including two alumni: Nick Luccketti ’71, archaeologist for of the James River Institute for Archaeology and Andy Edwards ’71, who was the longtime head archaeologist for Colonial Williamsburg.

wren building

“At that point, it becomes obsolete, and this ceases to function as any kind of drain,” said Kern. A few years later, the end of the drain was removed with the installation of the Sunken Garden. A photo from that time period shows workers removing the terracotta pipe from the drain under the Wren Building. Rockefeller Jr.’s restoration of Colonial Williamsburg, said Kern. The drain ceased to function around 1929 when the Wren Building was restored as part of John D. “I’m wondering if he inserts a whole new drain or maybe he re-engineers and rebuilds the 1702 drain.” “He raises the grade of the east yard of the building by about 3 feet to change the drainage and inserts this drain,” said Kern. Alexander Spotswood helped guide the re-engineering of the Wren Building after a 1705 fire - the first of three at the building. The next reference comes from 1710-1716, when Gov. The earliest references to the drain are from 1702, when people were complaining about it stinking, said Kern. Originally, the drain ran from underneath the center of the Wren Building, intersecting with one from the kitchen under the Great Hall before leading out into where the Sunken Garden (not a part of W&M originally but an addition in the 1930s) is today. The interior of the drain is about 23 inches wide and 51 inches high, and it’s at least 300 feet long.ĭrains were very common in the 18 th century, especially in buildings with kitchens, said Kern. Wires - possibly telephone wires - are also visible, and Kern thinks they were placed there sometime in the 20 th century. They also found the late 19th- or early 20th-century terracotta drain pipe that was laid in the drain when either Benjamin Ewell or Lyon Gardiner Tyler was president of W&M. The vaulted, brick drain (WYDaily/Courtesy of Stephen Salpukas) “So it’s clear this drain was collecting stuff throughout the 18th and 19th centuries, including from the period when William & Mary’s labor force was enslaved,” said Kern.

wren building

WREN BUILDING WINDOWS

Inside it, Kern and staff from the William & Mary Center for Archaeological Research found artifacts from the early 18th through the 19th centuries, including lead window cames (lead pieces holding glass window panels in place) from casement windows and glass from wine bottles. William and Mary was chartered in 1693 and is now a state-owned university the Old College Yard is the centerpiece of the Williamsburg Historic District.The discovery of the drain was made June 12 as work began on a project to widen the pathway in the Wren Building’s courtyard from 8 feet to 10.Īs construction workers pulled up the brick and concrete slabs underneath, the access point was uncovered, exposing the inside of the drain for the first time in centuries. Defining a forecourt are the President’s House (1732-33) and the Brafferton, built in 1723 as an Indian school. The Wren Building’s 1705 exterior appearance is well-documented, and it was to that form that it was returned during the restoration of 1928-31 directed by Colonial Williamsburg architects. It again burned in 18, but in each case the walls survived and were incorporated in the rebuildings. Hugh Jones in his Present State of Virginia (1724) stated that the building was “first modelled by Sir Christopher Wren, adapted to the nature of the country by the gentlemen there.” It was gutted by fire in 1705 and rebuilt in modified form within the original walls. The main building of the College of William & Mary, the nation’s second oldest seat of higher learning, the Wren Building was begun in 1695 and completed four years later. See link(s) below to view additional documentation.

WREN BUILDING PDF

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