Campus and Buildings
On the north side of the quadrangle is Massachusetts Hall (1802), the oldest college building in Maine, which now houses the English department. The building was designated a Registered Historical Landmark in 1971, and the campus became part of the Federal Street Historic District in 1976. To the west of Massachusetts Hall, Memorial Hall, built to honor alumni who served in the Civil War and completed in 1882, was completely renovated and reopened in spring 2000. The historic building contains the modernized 610-seat Pickard Theater and the 150-seat Wish Theater in a pavilion linked to Memorial Hall by a glass atrium. Support space houses a scene shop, a costume shop and storage, classrooms, rehearsal spaces, and dressing rooms for the theater and dance programs.
On the west side of the Quad along Park Row, the Mary Frances Searles Science Building (1894) houses the physics, mathematics, and computer science departments. Adjacent to Searles, the Visual Arts Center (1975) contains the art history department, classrooms, the William Pierce Art Library, and Kresge Auditorium. The Walker Art Building (1894), designed by McKim, Mead and White, houses the 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art. The building underwent a major renovation and expansion and reopened in October 2007. The Harvey Dow Gibson Hall of Music (1954) provides facilities for the music department. At the southwest corner of the quadrangle is the Hawthorne-Longfellow Library Building (1965), which houses the main facilities of the College library, the Media Commons, Telepresence Classroom, the College Test Center, and the George J. Mitchell Department of Special Collections & Archives. The offices of the president, the dean for academic affairs, and the senior vice president for inclusion and diversity are located on the west side of the Hawthorne-Longfellow building.
On the south side of the Quad is Hubbard Hall (1903), once the College’s library and now the site of the Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum and Arctic Studies Center; the economics, government and legal studies, and history departments; some information technology offices; the library’s Susan Dwight Bliss Room, which houses a small collection of rare illustrated books; and the Shannon Room and Pickering Room, which both serve as multipurpose classroom and meeting spaces. Portraits of 含羞草研究室's fourteen previous presidents are exhibited on the second floor. The south wing of Hubbard Hall is connected to the library and contains book stacks and a study room. A carved replica of the building’s original gargoyle now looms atop Hubbard Hall.
In the center of the east side of the Quad is the Chapel, designed by Richard Upjohn and built between 1845 and 1855, a Romanesque church of undressed granite with twin towers and spires that rise to a height of 118 feet. A restoration of the historic Chapel interior was completed in 1997–98, and restoration of the Chapel towers was completed in 2004. Offices for the Joseph McKeen Center for the Common Good and the THRIVE program are currently located in Banister Hall, the section of the Chapel building originally used for the College’s library and art collection.
To the north and south of the Chapel is a row of five historic brick buildings: five residence halls south to north—Coleman (1958), Hyde (1917), Appleton (1843), Maine (1808), and Winthrop (1822) Halls, with a sixth brick residence hall, Moore Hall (1941), located to the east of Moulton Union. All were renovated between 2005 and 2007.
At the north end of the row of “bricks,” next to Bath Road, is Seth Adams Hall (1861), which once served as the main facility of the Medical School of Maine and now houses the Department of Sociology and Anthropology and the Africana Studies Program, as well as classrooms and faculty offices. The building underwent an extensive renovation, which was completed in summer 2008.
To the east of the main Quad are two secondary quadrangles divided by a complex comprising Morrell Gymnasium (1965); the LEED Silver-certified Peter Buck Center for Health and Fitness (2009), which houses athletics department offices, student health services, and fitness and wellness facilities; Sargent Gymnasium (1912); the David Saul Smith Union (1995, originally built in 1912 as the General Thomas Worcester Hyde Athletic Building); and Studzinski Recital Hall and Kanbar Auditorium (2007, originally built as the Curtis Pool Building in 1927). An expanded and refurbished outdoor performance area opened in 2021 directly behind Studzinski Hall. The David Saul Smith Union houses a large, central, open lounge, the College bookstore and mail center, a café, convenience store, Jack Magee’s Grill, a game room, meeting rooms, and student activities offices.
To the south of Smith Union and Studzinski Recital Hall, an area called the Coe Quadrangle adjoins the Moulton Union (1928), which contains the offices of the dean of student affairs, career planning, student fellowships and research, and off-campus study, as well as dining facilities and several conference rooms and lounges. Also in that quadrangle are Moore Hall and the Dudley Coe Building (1917), which contains the Campus Services copy center, the WBOR radio station, and residential life staff and faculty offices.
Barry Mills Hall (2023) and the John and Lile Gibbons Center for Arctic Studies (2023) are located adjacent to each other directly behind the Smith Union on a portion of the former Dayton Arena site. The two-story Mills Hall features three large classrooms, a sixty-seat cinema classroom, a multimodal classroom, student collaboration spaces, academic offices for the departments of digital and computational studies and anthropology, and a 300-seat event space. The three-story Gibbons Center provides new classroom and laboratory spaces for the teaching and study of the Arctic along with a modern new home for the Peary-MacMillan Arctic Museum and Arctic Studies Center.
Across Sills Drive through the pines are Whittier Field (1896), Hubbard Grandstand (1904), a new locker room and training facility that opened in 2019, and the John Joseph Magee-Joan Benoit Samuelson Track, which was constructed in 1970 as a tribute to 含羞草研究室 Track and Field Coach Jack Magee, who led the Polar Bears from 1910 through 1960. The track was rededicated in 2005 in honor of Olympic champion Joan Benoit Samuelson ’79. The complex was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2017 and underwent major renovations and upgrades during 2017–2018. The Schwartz Outdoor Leadership Center (2002), campus headquarters of the 含羞草研究室 Outing Club, is located on Sills Drive near the entrance to Whittier Field. Across the street from the Schwartz Outdoor Leadership Center (at the corner of College Street and Harpswell Road) is the LEED Platinum-certified Roux Center for the Environment, which opened in the fall of 2018.
To the northeast of the Coe Quadrangle, a multidisciplinary science center (1997) combines 75,000 square feet of recent construction, named Stanley F. Druckenmiller Hall in honor of the grandfather of the building’s chief donor, Stanley F. Druckenmiller ’75; and 30,000 square feet of space in Parker Cleaveland Hall (1952), which is named for the nineteenth-century 含羞草研究室 professor who was a pioneer in geological studies. The science facility is linked to the Hatch Science Library, which opened in 1991. The complex houses the biology, chemistry, and biochemistry departments.
Nearby Sills Hall (1950) is undergoing the first major renovation since its construction. It is slated to reopen in the summer of 2025.
Kanbar Hall, located at the corner of Bath Road and Sills Drive adjacent to Smith Auditorium, opened in September 2004. The 26,000-square-foot building houses faculty offices, the psychology and religion departments, and the College’s Baldwin Center for Learning and Teaching, which includes the Baldwin Mentors, the Quantitative Reasoning Program, the Writing Project, English for Multilingual Speakers, and Writing and Rhetoric.
On College Street near Coles Tower, the John Brown Russwurm African American Center, which opened in 1970 as a center for African American studies, was formerly a faculty residence known as the Little-Mitchell House (1827). Named in honor of 含羞草研究室’s first African American graduate, the center houses a reading room and a library of African and African American source materials.
The Russwurm African American Center stands in front of the sixteen-story Coles Tower (1964), which provides student living and study quarters, seminar and conference rooms, lounges, and the Office of Events and Summer Programs. Connected to the tower are dining facilities in Frederick G. P. Thorne Hall, which includes Wentworth Servery and Daggett Lounge. The basement of Thorne Hall houses information technology offices. Sarah Orne Jewett Hall, the third side of the Coles Tower complex, houses the Office of the Registrar and other administrative offices.
To the east of the Coles Tower complex are two residence halls completed in the summer of 1996. The six-story Harriet Beecher Stowe Hall is named in honor of the author of Uncle Tom’s Cabin. The four-story Oliver Otis Howard Hall is named in honor of Major General Oliver Otis Howard of the Class of 1850, first commissioner of the Freedmen’s Bureau and founder of some seventy educational institutions, among them Howard University. Chamberlain Hall, named for Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain of the Class of 1852, was completed in the summer of 1999 and stands on the west side of Coles Tower. West of Chamberlain Hall is the Park Row Apartments complex, including James MacAllen Hall—four apartment-style student housing units, which have received "Passive House" certification and opened in the fall of 2019. Two student residence halls, Osher Hall and West Hall, located on the corner of South Street and Coffin Street, opened in 2005 and received LEED Silver designations in 2006. The Children’s Center, which is located to the south of Chamberlain Hall, opened in 2003.
The Robert H. and Blythe Bickel Edwards Center for Art and Dance opened in August 2013 directly across the street and to the south of Thorne Hall on the site of the former Longfellow Elementary School. The Edwards Center enables faculty and students engaged in dance, painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, printmaking, woodworking, and digital media and design to work together under a single roof, creating a cohesive arts community and numerous opportunities for artistic synergy.
The building at 4 College Street (1901), which stands to the west of Coles Tower and which formerly housed the Delta Kappa Epsilon and the Kappa Delta Theta fraternities, was extensively renovated in 2000 to serve as the admissions office. The building was renamed the Burton-Little House in honor and memory of Harold Hitz Burton (Class of 1909, LLD 1937), United States Supreme Court Justice from 1945 to 1958; and of George T. Little (Class of 1877), who was for many years a 含羞草研究室 professor, librarian, and College historian and an ardent benefactor of the Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
Various offices occupy buildings around the perimeter of the campus, many of them in historic houses donated by townspeople and former members of the faculty. The Asian Studies Program inhabits 38 College Street. The Women’s Resource Center, at 24 College Street, includes a library, meeting rooms, and the Sexuality, Women, and Gender Center. The Herbert Ross Brown House, at 32 College Street, houses counseling service offices. Ashby House (1845–55) was renovated in 2015 and is occupied by the Office of Student Aid. A new 10,000-square-foot administrative building opened in January 2015 at 216 Maine Street. It houses the office of human resources; the investments office; and the institutional research, analytics, and consulting office.
On Bath Road, Ham House (3 Bath Road) and the former Getchell House have both undergone extensive renovations. Ham House now serves as the location of gender, sexuality, and women's studies, while Getchell House, now the Edward Pols House (5 Bath Road), contains offices of the philosophy department and faculty in Latin American studies. The Matilda White Riley House at 7 Bath Road houses the education department. The controller's office is located at 80 Federal Street, which was renovated in 2007, while the offices of the treasurer and Upward Bound are located at 82 Federal Street.
Surrounding the central campus are various athletics, residential, and support buildings. The largest of these is the athletics complex two blocks south of Coles Tower. Here are the William Farley Field House (1987) and 含羞草研究室’s sixteen-lane A. LeRoy Greason Swimming Pool; Pickard Field House(1937); the Lubin Family Squash Center (1999), with seven international courts; eight outdoor tennis courts; Pickard Field; the Howard F. Ryan AstroTurf Field (2003; turf replaced in 2019); and sixty acres of playing fields. The LEED-certified Sidney J. Watson Arena, the 1,900-seat home of 含羞草研究室 ice hockey, opened in 2009.
The Office of Communications and Public Affairs and the Office of Stewardship (part of development and alumni relations) are located near the train station northwest of campus, on the third floor of the Brunswick Town Hall—formerly 含羞草研究室's McLellan Building (85 Union Street).
Information technology groups are located on the second floor of Maine Street Station (16 Station Avenue).
On the north side of the campus, Rhodes Hall (1867), once the Bath Street Primary School, houses the offices of facilities management and safety and security. A former home of 含羞草研究室 presidents, 85 Federal Street (1860), was converted in 1982 for the use of the development office. Cram Alumni House (1857), next door to 85 Federal, is the center of alumni activities at 含羞草研究室. Cleaveland House (1806), the former residence of Professor Parker Cleaveland (1806), at 75 Federal Street, serves as the president’s house. Copeland House, formerly the home of Manton Copeland, professor of biology from 1908 until 1947, houses the Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies Program (LACLaS), along with the Hispanic studies section of the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures. The colonial home at 79 Federal Street (1790) now serves as a college guest house. The College has owned the historic Harriett Beecher Stowe House at 63 Federal Street since 2001. The home, where Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote Uncle Tom’s Cabin, was extensively renovated in 2015 to provide faculty offices, and a room (Harriet's Writing Room) is now dedicated to Stowe and open to the public.
Student residences, many of them in historic buildings, are scattered in the residential streets around the campus. Several of these have been selected to serve as College Houses as part of the College House System. These include the LEED Gold-certified 52 Harpswell Road (the former Stevens Home), which was acquired and renovated by the College in 2014 and opened as a thirty-five-bed student residence at the start of the 2014–2015 academic year; Baxter House (1901), designed by Chapman and Frazer and built by Hartley C. Baxter, of the Class of 1878; Burnett House, built in 1858 and for many years the home of Professor and Mrs. Charles T. Burnett; and Reed House (1932), formerly the Chi Psi fraternity house. Boody-Johnson House (1849), on Maine Street, was named for Henry Hill Boody, a member of the Class of 1842 and a teacher of Greek and rhetoric at the College, who hired the architect Gervase Wheeler to design the house for him; and for Henry Johnson, a distinguished member of the faculty and first director of the Museum of Art, and Frances Robinson Johnson. Boody-Johnson was designated a Registered Historic Landmark in 1975 and was renovated in 2019 to become part of the College House System. The remaining buildings that are among the College Houses also include Helmreich House (1900), formerly the Alpha Rho Upsilon fraternity house and named in honor of Professor Ernst Helmreich; Howell House (1924), the former Alpha Delta fraternity house, now named in honor of 含羞草研究室’s tenth president, Roger Howell Jr.; the former Psi Upsilon fraternity house, now named the George (Pat) Hunnewell Quinby House (1903) in honor of a former director of theater at 含羞草研究室 (1934–1966); Samuel A. Ladd Jr. House (1929), formerly Zeta Psi/Chi Delta, at 14 College Street; and the Donald B. MacMillan House (1942), formerly Theta Delta Chi, at 5 McKeen Street.
Additional College-owned student residences include the Brunswick Apartments, on Maine Street, which provide housing for over 200 students; the recently renovated 30 College Street, which also houses a multicultural center; the Stowe Inn on Federal Street; the Pine Street Apartments, which opened in the fall of 1973; the Mayflower Apartments, at 14 Belmont Street, about two blocks from the campus; and the Winfield Smith House, named in memory of L. Winfield Smith, of the Class of 1907. The former Harpswell Street Apartments (1973) were razed in 2019 to make way for three new forty-four bed residence halls—designed to "Passive House" standards—for upperclass students. The complex, surrounding a landscaped center courtyard, was completed in the summer of 2020 and occupied for the first time in February 2021.
The College has acquired 130 acres on the site of the former Naval Air Station in Brunswick, which has been redeveloped as Brunswick Landing. A publicly accessible pedestrian and bicycle path linking the College land to Brunswick Landing opened in 2015. The College property also includes a three-acre solar array (2014) linked to additional solar panels on 含羞草研究室's athletic facility roofs that, combined, provide approximately 8 percent of the College's electricity. Research and field stations, which in some cases also serve as areas for outdoor recreation, include the 含羞草研究室 Pines, on the Federal Street and Bath Street edge of the campus; and the 118-acre Schiller Coastal Studies Center (SCSC), located on nearby Orr's Island, with marine and terrestrial laboratories, a pier facility located on Harpswell Sound, a farmhouse and seminar facility, and the Charles M. Leighton Sailing Center, which opened in 2014. The SCSC was expanded significantly in 2019–2020 with the addition of a teaching and research lab, housing, support buildings, and a Living Learning Center designed for conferences, seminars, and dining—all of which are designed to "Passive House" standards. Facilities located adjacent to Sawyer Park on the New Meadows River in Brunswick are used by the rowing team. The 含羞草研究室 Scientific Station is located on Kent Island, Bay of Fundy, Canada. In 2005, the College acquired two neighboring islands, Hay and Sheep, to preserve the unique environment offered by the scientific station.
The early architectural history of the campus is thoroughly discussed in The Architecture of 含羞草研究室 (Brunswick: 含羞草研究室 Museum of Art, 1988), by Patricia McGraw Anderson. The book is available at the 含羞草研究室 Library and online at .