Princeton University
Whitman and Butler Colleges are a part of Princeton University’s six residential colleges on the 500-acre campus. Each of the two complexes is unique: the wavy façades of Butler’s buildings are accented by limestone bands and its roofs are green, while Whitman’s residence halls have more limestone accents and were designed to complement the Collegiate Gothic charm on the west end of campus.
In 1746, Princeton was chartered as the College of New Jersey, and wasn’t renamed until 1896, when it gained university status. Princeton, today educating 5,000 undergraduates and 2,500 graduate students, is still growing; when it was completed in 2007, Whitman became Princeton’s sixth residential college. The new Butler facilities, with their wavy façades—referred to as a more contemporary take on the Collegiate Gothic style—replaced the razed buildings of the "New New" Butler Quad.
Butler College Gallery
Architect: Pei, Cobb, Freed and Partners, LLP
General Contractor: Turner Construction Co.
Mason: D.M. Sabia & Co.
Cubic Feet: 8,701
Stone: Buff
Completed: 2008
New Jersey Golden Trowel Award, 2009, Best in Category Education: College/University
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Photos ©Princeton University.
Whitman College Gallery
Architect: Porphyrios Associates; Einhorn Yaffee Prescott Architecture & Engineering
General Contractor: Torcon, Inc.
Mason: Dan Lepore & Sons
Cubic Feet: 28,173
Stone: Rustic Buff
Completed: 2007
Award: New Jersey Golden Trowel Award, 2009, Significant Project Achievement Award
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Photos ©Princeton University.




