Council of Independent Colleges Historic Campus Architecture Project

 

 
Saint Leo Hall

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Institution Name: Belmont Abbey College
Original/Historic Place Name: Saint Leo Hall
Location on Campus: next to visitor parking, near Robert Lee Stowe Hall
Date(s) of Construction and Designer(s):
1906-1907original construction McInerney, Michael
1988restoration and renovation Unknown
Type of Place: Individual building
Style(s): (Glossary)
Materials:
Foundation: granite
Walls: brick; wood
Roof: slate
 
    Function:
ca. 1907auditorium (orchestra hall and music studio, second floor; drama hall, third floor)
ca. 1907gymnasium (1st floor)
ca. 2004-present (2007)auditorium (3rd floor, Grace Auditorium, a lecture hall and assembly area)
ca. 2004-present (2007)faculty offices (2nd floor)
ca. 2004-present (2007)other (campus bookstore on first floor, plus offices)

Significance: architecture, culture, history, religion
Landmark designation:
National RegisterBelmont Abbey Historic District (1993)
Narrative: see below
References: see below
 

Narrative:
Located directly south of Stowe Hall, Saint Leo Hall is a classic statement of the architectural style called "American Benedictine" (so called because of its association with the monasteries of this country). This structure was the first major design in the South by Father Michael McInerney, a Belmont Abbey monk and noted architect. Saint Leo Hall helped to establish McInerney's reputation as a leading architect of ecclesiastical projects. The building was named for the patron saint of the first abbot of Belmont and was renovated and restored in 1988.

The building has many distinctive features indicative of McInerney's architectural style. He used pointed, fluted capitals to crown each of the building's ascending lines; and he also attempted to mitigate the building's box design through the layered effect of the building's brickwork, its protruding vertical brick columns, buttressed projections at the entrances, a row of granite trim, and large, Neo-Gothic double doors for the north and south ends. A five-foot extension at the center of the east and west walls stretches almost 19 feet and further accentuates the building's vertical lines.

Originally, the building contained a gymnasium, a space now used as the college bookstore. It also currently houses faculty offices and Grace Auditorium, a lecture hall and assembly area located on the third floor.
 

References:
I. Bibliographic sources:

Alexander, Frances P., and Richard L. Mattson. Belmont Abbey Historic District [including Belmont Abbey College]. National Register of Historic Places designation report. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of the Interior/National Park Service, 1993.

Baumstein, Paschal. The Art of Michael McInerney. Booklet. Belmont, NC: Archives of Belmont Abbey, 1992.

Baumstein, Paschal, Beth Bargar, and Debra G. Estes. A Walking Tour of Historic Belmont Abbey. Booklet. Belmont, NC: Belmont Abbey College, 1997.

II. Location of other data:
University: Library, Special Collections
SHPO
Government Offices
Other: Archives, Belmont Abbey College
 

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