Other NamesBuilding 149TypeUniversity buildingsIdentifierUMA-PL-000000017History
At the end of World War I the Arts Faculty, by far the largest, was still crowded into the oldest buildings of the University. 'Class rooms which were large enough when students were counted in half-dozens, were miserably inadequate when the larger classes contained hundreds', observed Professor of History Ernest Scott. The Library was also absurdly small. The Arts Building (now Old Arts, its name since the New Arts or 'Babel' building was erected, with the Arts South or John Medley Building appearing a generation later), completed between 1919 and 1924 and faced with yellow freestone was designed and built by the Victorian Public Works Department, its design attributed to Alfred La Gerche (as signified in a commemorative plaque unveiled in 1997) . Its occupation allowed the whole of the north wing of the Quadrangle building to be converted for library purposes.