Main Building is one of the most architecturally significant college residence halls in the United States. Completed in 1861 as the original building of Vassar Female College, it is a massive, French Second Empire structure spanning nearly 500 feet in length — designed by James Renwick Jr., the same architect responsible for St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the building once housed the entire college: classrooms, dining, chapel, faculty apartments, and student rooms all under one roof. Today it functions as a residential hall accommodating approximately 280–300 students, predominantly first-year women and non-binary students, across its sprawling corridor floors. Communal bathrooms serve each floor; there is no central AC. The building's long interior hallways, grand parlors, and historic reading rooms create an atmosphere unlike any other college dormitory in America. The imposing central tower and mansard roofline remain defining features of the Vassar skyline. Living in Main Building is widely considered a formative part of the first-year Vassar experience, and many alumnae cite the building's grandeur as inseparable from their memory of arriving on campus.
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