Location ID: #10081747
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Shots of 'front' of house (river side) followed by property wide counter clockwise movement around the house.
Location ID: #10004988
8 of 9 photos
Location ID: #10004321
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Location ID: #10128409
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WELCOME TO WORKSHOP, CHARLESTON’S EXPLORATORY FOOD COURT. TRY SOMETHING NEW AT ONE OF SIX ROTATING KITCHENS, WHERE EMERGING AND RENOWNED CHEFS EXPERIMENT WITH CULINARY CONCEPTS.
Location ID: #10129793
8 of 55 photos
Workmen’s is located in a small repurposed house on the outskirts of Charleston, and is known to attract a rush of blue-collar workers around lunchtime, all seeking a plate of Bellinger’s hearty and affordable cooking. The menu is set up like a ...
Location ID: #10125285
8 of 32 photos
A unique facility overlooking the Winthrop Lake, the Shack is a lodge that has been used through the years for various student and faculty activities. Winthrop's fifth president, Charles S. Davis, who served from 1959-73, enjoyed outings here so ...
Location ID: #10125562
8 of 16 photos
An example of the Classical Revival style of architecture, Stewart House was built in 1895 by Captain W.H. Stewart of Rock Hil. Winthrop currently leases the facility to the S.C. Center for Educator Recruitment, Retention and Advancement.
Location ID: #10125547
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Completed in 1999, the building is the first addition to the university's central campus in more than three decades. The 65,000-square-foot building cost $12 million and provides laboratory facilities for the departments of biology and human ...
Location ID: #10125546
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Built in 1967, Dinkins Hall is home to the offices of University College, which coordinates and supports programs in both academic affairs and student affairs.
Location ID: #10125550
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Home of the College of Arts and Sciences, it is the most elaborately detailed of the Neo-Georgian-style buildings on campus. Damaged by fire in 1986, Kinard was restored and rededicated in 1988, at which time a portrait of Dr. Kinard was presented ...
Location ID: #10125549
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Bancroft acquired its name in 1920 when the theatre building assumed the Johnson name. Constructed as a student residence hall in the Neo-Georgian style, the building was used in 1942 as a location to house young men in the Army Air Corps civilian ...
Location ID: #10125548
8 of 18 photos
Owens Hall is a 32,200-square-foot building that stays true to Winthrop’s devotion to close interaction between students and faculty. Each of the 21 classrooms inside is equipped with SMART technology, and the facility also includes a computer lab, ...
Location ID: #10125563
8 photos
The building served formerly as the private residence for the vice president of academic affairs and later the dean of students. Sykes House is now home to the Office of Financial Aid.
Location ID: #10125019
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Originally a residence hall for seniors, Lee Wicker was the last Neo-Georgian-style building to be erected on the Winthrop campus. It was named for Lee Wicker Kinard, wife of Winthrop's second president, Dr. James P. Kinard, who served from 1928-34. ...
Location ID: #10125015
8 of 49 photos
For years Rutledge was known as Carnegie Library, named for industrialist and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie who provided funds for its construction. It was renovated into a classroom building when Dacus Library was constructed in 1969. That same ...
Location ID: #10124843
8 of 20 photos
Winthrop’s largest building, the 137,000-square-foot Lois Rhame West Health, Physical Education and Wellness Center, debuted in August 2007. Named for a 1943 Winthrop alumna and former South Carolina First Lady, Lois West, the signature facility ...
Location ID: #10124849
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Byrnes is named for James F. Byrnes, former S.C. governor and U.S. Secretary of State. While a U.S. senator, Byrnes arranged for Works Project Administration funds to be used with matching state funds to construct three campus buildings – the ...
Location ID: #10124848
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The 128,000-square-foot DiGiorgio Campus Center brings the heart of the Winthrop University campus to Scholars Walk. Within its walls are an array of facilities where members of Winthrop’s myriad student organizations will hone their leadership ...
Location ID: #10009246
8 photos
Built in the eclectic style of medieval hall, McBryde for years was the primary dining place for Winthrop students. Upperclassmen presided at the heads of tables; students sat in assigned seats for family-style meals. The building's namesake is ...
Location ID: #10001690
8 of 50 photos
Winthrop University, often referred to as Winthrop or WU and formerly known as Winthrop College, is a public, coeducational, liberal arts university located in Rock Hill, South Carolina, United States. It was founded in 1886 by David Bancroft ...
Location ID: #10126599
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Worthy Camp is summer camp hosted by the Rock Hill Police Department. The Worthy Boys Camp began in 1949 when 48 acres of land were donated to the Rock Hill Pistol Club for a training and firing range. The donation came with the stipulation that a ...
Location ID: #10125283
8 of 71 photos
Located one mile east of main campus within the Winthrop Recreational Area, the 6,100-seat Winthrop Coliseum is the hub of athletic activity at Winthrop. The site of Winthrop's NCAA Division I men's and women's basketball games and women's ...
Location ID: #10125040
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Vivian Moore Carroll Hall features the Carroll Capital Markets Training and Trading Center, a facility that connects students to global markets through interactive technology. This space is equipped with a stock ticker that runs around the ...
Location ID: #10125034
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The Greeks studied Phi and applied it to construction of such wonders as the Parthenon. Whether by design or intuition, the appearance of Phi throughout nature and over time remains constant. It is the very physical nature of creation. It is seen as ...