DescriptionGeorge C. Taylor Law Building, University of Tennessee at Knoxville, Fort Sanders, Knoxville, TN.jpg
English: Built in 1948-50, this Collegiate Gothic Revival-style building was named for George Caldwell Taylor, former Eastern District of Tennessee federal judge, whom had graduated from the University of Tennessee Law School in 1908. The building features a red brick exterior with a gabled red shingle roof, limestone trim, and a limestone base. The complex was expanded with a modern building to the rear in 1971, now known as Blount Hall, which takes on a bold clean lined geometric form, but ties back to the original building through the use of limestone and brick on the exterior. The complex was further expanded in 1997 with the construction of the adjacent postmodern complex to the west of the original building and attached to its western flank with a cylindrical lobby, with the 1971 building being repurposed for other programs. The building presently is known as the George C. Taylor Wing of the Taylor Law Center, which houses the University of Tennessee at Knoxville’s College of Law.
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