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Trinity Washington University
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==Campus buildings== [[File:TrinityUniv.jpg|thumb|Trinity Washington University]] [[File:Trinity Main and Chapel.jpg|thumb|right|Main Hall, designed by [[Edwin Forrest Durang]].]] The campus includes the following buildings: * Main Hall, which houses most of the administrative offices on campus, many faculty offices and classrooms, as well as the university's admissions office, O'Connor Auditorium, and bookstore. * Payden Academic Center, opened in 2016, has nursing and science labs, classrooms for all disciplines and Trinity's technology hub.<ref>{{Cite news|title=How this women's college got its first new academic building in 50 years|language=en-US|newspaper=Washington Post|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2016/06/03/how-this-womens-college-got-its-first-new-academic-building-in-50-years/|access-date=2021-08-19|issn=0190-8286}}</ref> * Trinity Center for Women and Girls in Sports is an athletic, recreational, and educational complex located in the heart of Trinity's campus. * Sister Helen Sheehan Library holds more than 200,000 volumes. * Alumnae Hall, the university's dining hall, serves three meals a day throughout the academic year and is also a residence hall. * Cuvilly Hall is a residence hall primarily for first-year students. * Kerby Hall is a residence hall. In the 1980s, it was a residence hall for graduate students of other colleges in Washington, D.C., including [[Bob Casey, Jr.|Robert Casey]], who studied law at Catholic University of America and later became a U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania. * Notre Dame Chapel hosts many of Trinity's traditions, including Academic Convocation, Freshman Medal Ceremony, Cap and Gown Mass, and Baccalaureate Mass. Dedicated in 1924, it was designed by the architectural firm [[Maginnis & Walsh|Maginnis and Walsh]] and won a national architecture award for ecclesiastical architecture from the [[American Institute of Architects]]. It was restored in 1997 and features [[Guastavino tile|Guastavino]] tiles, stained glass windows by [[Charles Jay Connick]] and a mosaic by [[Bancel LaFarge]]. The chapel hosted the pope during his 1979 visit to the United States.
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