Iowa State University
Building Information
Iowa State University
Business and Finance Division
Facilities Planning and Management
Durham Center photo

Durham Center

Official abbreviation: DURHAM

Constructed in 1989

Space in this building

108,200 total square feet

Floor Plans

All rooms in this building

Departments and space usage

Evacuation Maps from Environmental Health and Safety

Building Hours

Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
6:30 AM -
11:00 PM
6:30 AM -
11:00 PM
6:30 AM -
11:00 PM
6:30 AM -
11:00 PM
6:30 AM -
6:00 PM
6:30 AM -
5:00 PM
9:30 AM -
11:00 PM
Building Supervisor:
WEAKLEND, GARY
294-8038
gfweakl@iastate.edu

Location

Latitude:42.02747
Longitude:-93.64985

Note: Buildings on the ISU campus do not have street addresses.

See this building on the online campus map

See this building on Google Maps

Nearby parking lots

3D SketchUp Model from the Trimble Warehouse

Services / Maintenance / Projects

Current maintenance requests and projects

Utility outage log

Custodial Service is provided by Custodial Team 4

Mail Service by Postal and Parcel Services

  • 10:00 AM: Collection / Delivery (Room M0190)

Dumpster collection by Campus Services

  • Tuesday: between 7:30 AM and 9:30 AM
  • Thursday: between 7:30 AM and 9:30 AM

Recycling locations in this building

To request service, call 294-5100 or issue an online service request.

History

The Durham Center opened in 1989 to satisfy the computer needs and the telecommunication needs of the 25,000-student campus.

The new building, which is actually named the "Charles W. Durham and Marge Henningson Durham Center for Computation and Communication," allowed the university to double the computer capacity available for research and instructional support for students and faculty alike. And this doubling of the university's computer capacity was only the beginning of a long sequence of computational improvements within the university aimed at giving Iowa State students access to one of the best computer systems available to students anywhere.

The Durham Center also serves as the headquarters for the university's expanded telecommunications system, allowing for unencumbered growth as telecommunications needs continue to expand.

The Durham Center boasts a striking design that features a slanted roof covered with copper sheeting, a limestone finish to complement nearby buildings, and a sixty-foot-high atrium with large lighting trellises suspended forty feet off the floor.