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University of Virginia, Rotunda, University Avenue & Rugby Road, Charlottesville, Charlottesville, Virginia

description

Summary

Significance: Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) intended the Rotunda at the University of Virginia to be the focal point of the school and its dominant building, standing at the northern end of a lawn enclosed on three sides. To represent the classical ideal of balance and symmetry in this structure, he turned to the buildings of ancient Rome, and selected the Pantheon as the most enduring monument to that legacy. The original Pantheon, expressing the image of a globe held within a drum, was built by the Roman General Marcus Agrippa during the reign of Caesar Augustus (27 B.C. - A.D. 14). It was enlarged to its present form during the reign of Hadrian (A.D. 117-138), but Agrippa's name was retained over the portico. IN 1817, from the outset of the planning stage, Jefferson thought of the Rotunda as a half-size scale model of the Roman prototype, and he derived his working dimensions from the writings of Andrea Palladio (1508-1580). His Four Books of Architecture was published in 1570, and this folio of engravings, by an influential architect of the Italian Renaissance, had served Jefferson as an aesthetic guidebook from the time of his youth. His own copy was the London Edition of 1742, and the name Palladio appears frequently on drawings for the rotunda, written in Jefferson's hand. For the Rotunda, however, Jefferson did not conceive of interior architectural space in the same aspect as the Romans, who saw the Pantheon as a vast unobstructed vault. In his general plan view for the first floor, he envisioned, as a concept in plane geometry, three identical circles intersecting along a centerline, the middle circle containing elliptical, or lens shaped figures. The concept, then extended into solid geometry, produced three equal cylinders conjoined together. To a visitor entering the Rotunda, this interpretation of advancing and receding arcs tends to create an impression of interior flow and movement that is unmatched by any public building in America. The same radius reappears in the curvature of the rear wall of the hallway, and is repeated in the oval staircases arching above the main entrance. The entrance of the building was considered to be its south front. The north face was treated as a secondary access and no portico was provided in the initial plan view. It was realized that the Pantheon possessed only one door, and the present north porch of the University Rotunda was not added until the turn of the 20th century.

Survey number: HABS VA-193-A

Building/structure dates: 1817-1826 Initial Construction

National Register of Historic Places NRIS Number: 70000865

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Tags

educational facilities rotundas us presidents education pattern books charlottesville va university virginia rotunda university avenue rugby rugby road charlottesville paul berry historic american buildings survey thomas jefferson photo ultra high resolution high resolution architecture science geometry italian andrea palladio venetian united states history late renaissance roman library of congress national register of historic places
date_range

Date

1520 - 1600
person

Contributors

Historic American Buildings Survey, creator
Jefferson, Thomas
Berry, Paul, delineator
place

Location

Charlottesville (Va.) ,  38.02931, -78.47668
create

Source

Library of Congress
link

Link

http://www.loc.gov/
copyright

Copyright info

No known restrictions on images made by the U.S. Government; images copied from other sources may be restricted. http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/res/114_habs.html

label_outline Explore Rugby Road, Paul Berry, Rugby

Topics

educational facilities rotundas us presidents education pattern books charlottesville va university virginia rotunda university avenue rugby rugby road charlottesville paul berry historic american buildings survey thomas jefferson photo ultra high resolution high resolution architecture science geometry italian andrea palladio venetian united states history late renaissance roman library of congress national register of historic places