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Inside Walker Hall

The newly restored campus building gives graduate and professional students a home of their own.

Exterior of Walker Hall

The 85-year-old Walker Hall is bustling with student life again after a front-to-back renovation, including retrofits for accessibility and seismic safety. Vacant since 2011, Walker 鈥 near the center of campus 鈥 reopened at the start of the fall quarter. The front part (the two-story north side of the Spanish mission-style building, facing Shields Avenue) is now the Graduate Center, giving graduate and professional students a home of their own for the first time 鈥 and, in fact, it鈥檚 the first center of its kind in the UC system. The three wings in back have been converted into general-assignment classroom space.

Photography by Karin Higgins and Gregory Urquiaga


Photo showing a building facade at an angle and from a low vantage point. The building has windows on the side edges and top, with large wooden eaves and wood slats on the walls. Two female students walk by toward the camera. Shields Library can be seen in the background.

South Side

The wings give the building its E shape, with each wing perpendicular to the main structure. During the renovation, they were cut back some to make way for the Walker Promenade connecting Shields Library, to the east of Walker Hall, and the Student Community Center to the west.


Photo inside a classroom during class. The camera is at the back of the room, showing the backs of students as they listen to a lecturer at the front. There is a large screen pulled down from the ceiling across the front and large windows on one side of the room.

New classrooms

The promenade provides access to the wings-turned-classrooms 鈥 numbered 1310, 1320 and 1330 Walker Hall 鈥 seating 194, 72 and 99 students, respectively. The seats in the largest room are tiered and fixed. Pictured: Econ 101: Intermediate Macroeconomics.


Photo inside a classroom during a class. Students are seated together around tables, interacting. Tables have microphones for each student and areas to plug in laptops. A lecturer is walking and talking in the background.

Encouraging interaction

The seats in the other rooms are moveable, allowing group work. Here, student listen in the 鈥淥ptimization鈥 course, taught by Stefan Schonsheck, assistant professor of mathematics.


Photo looking through interior glass doors into a room with tables, chairs and two women seated while working on laptops.

Support system

The center houses myriad programs in 嘿嘿视频鈥 support system for graduate students鈥 academic, professional and personal well-being 鈥 including mentoring and advising, and financial and mental health services. Also included: meeting and conference rooms, a collaborative studio and quiet writing lounge, graduate commons and kitchen, lactation room and parent study lounge.


Photo of an older building facade with the word Engineering in old letters high above an entrance where double doors are framed by bright blue tiles. A path leads directly to the doors through a short lawn. Large oak trees flank the entrance with golden light. In a modern typeface, it says Graduate Center above the doors.

Sign of the times

The campus dedicated what was then the Agricultural Engineering Building in November 1928 along with the Animal Science Building (now Hart Hall) across the street. The building鈥檚 name changed to Walker Hall in 1959, honoring agricultural engineering professor Harry B. Walker, who was chair of the Agricultural Engineering Division from the time he joined the faculty in 1928 until 1947. And though the Agricultural Engineering Division left long ago, the 鈥淓ngineering鈥 name still adorns the wall above the main entrance.

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