Estufa Explained

Estufa
Designated Other1:N.M. State Register of Cultural Properties
Designated Other1 Date:January 7, 1988
Designated Other1 Number:1412[1]
Designated Other1 Num Position:bottom
Location:Southeast corner of University Boulevard and Dr. Martin Luther King Boulevard, Albuquerque, NM
Coordinates:35.0839°N -106.6258°W
Built:1908
Architect:Charles Lembke (Tri-Alpha member): University President William G. Tight: members of the Alpha Alpha Alpha Fraternity
Architecture:Pueblo Revival
Added:September 22, 1988
Mpsub:New Mexico Campus Buildings Built 1906–1937 TR
Refnum:88001542

The Estufa is a historic structure on the University of New Mexico campus in Albuquerque, New Mexico. It was built in 1907–08 by a local social fraternity and has served since 1915 as the primary meeting location of the university's Pi Kappa Alpha chapter. The building's history is steeped in fraternity lore and supposedly no woman has ever seen its interior. It is listed in both the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties and the National Register of Historic Places.

The Estufa is modeled after a kiva, a ceremonial meeting place used by the Pueblo people. It has thick adobe walls and contains a single windowless room with seating around the edges. Construction of the building was guided by university president William G. Tight, who promoted the use of Pueblo Revival architecture on campus. The Estufa was one of the first buildings in New Mexico to employ this style.

Name

An estufa [Sp., a stove, a warm room. Cf. Stove] is an assembly room in a dwelling of the Pueblo Indians (i.e. a kiva), per Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, 1998.

History

The Estufa was built in 1907–08 by the local social fraternity Alpha Alpha Alpha, previously known as the Yum Yum Society. The project received support from university president William G. Tight, who was interested in strengthening the Greek system on campus. At the same time, Tight had been working to promote Pueblo Revival architecture at the university and had already overseen construction of two new dormitories and a boiler plant in the Pueblo style. Under this influence, the Tri-Alphas built their meeting room in the form of a kiva or "estufa," a traditional feature of Pueblo architecture.

Ground was broken on the project in January 1907,[2] though the work evidently proceeded slowly and it was not finished until April 1908. The U.N.M. Weekly student newspaper reported that month that[3]

The Tri-Alphas held their first meeting in the Estufa on February 20, 1908,[4] while the building was still unfinished. In 1915, Alpha Alpha Alpha became the Beta Delta chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha, the university's first national fraternity,[5] and the Estufa has continued to serve as the chapter's primary meeting location for nearly 100 years.[6] During its long history as a fraternity council room, the Estufa has been involved in numerous pranks[5] [7] and has been broken into or vandalized many times, often by the rival Sigma Chi fraternity.[8] The building is accessible only to members of Pi Kappa Alpha, and according to fraternity lore no woman has ever seen its interior.[5] [9]

The Estufa has survived both accidental and intentional vehicular collisions[6] as well as "attempts to destroy it with fire, dynamite, water and other weapons" according to an Albuquerque Journal article from 1952.[10] In 1947 alone, the building was set on fire four times.[11] It was also damaged by an accidental gas explosion in 1958 that left five people injured.[12] In the 1960s, the building seemed doomed by a University Boulevard widening project,[13] but city planners ultimately chose a road alignment further to the west that kept the Estufa out of harm's way. It was added to the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties and the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[1]

Architecture

The Estufa is an elliptical, one-story building loosely modeled after a kiva at Santo Domingo Pueblo.[9] As such, it was one of the earliest expressions of the Pueblo Revival style in New Mexico, and is the oldest surviving example at UNM. The walls are adobe and are approximately 14inches thick. The building was originally accessed via an external staircase and roof trapdoor, but this arrangement has since been replaced by a more conventional door. The interior of the Estufa contains a single windowless room, approximately 500square feet in area,[6] which has been described as a pit with seating around the edge.[14]

Despite the prevalence of Pueblo style architecture at UNM, the Estufa is one of only two buildings on campus actually made out of adobe. The other is the Naval Science Building designed by John Gaw Meem.[15]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Listed State and National Register Properties. New Mexico Historic Preservation Commission. 20 October 2013. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150425030224/http://nmhistoricpreservation.org/assets/files/registers/2012%20Report_%20Section%202_%20Arranged%20by%20County.pdf. 25 April 2015.
  2. News: Locals . November 6, 2017 . U.N.M. Weekly . January 19, 1907 . 4.
  3. News: Tri-Alpha fraternity house completed . November 6, 2017 . U.N.M. Weekly . April 25, 1908 . 4.
  4. News: Personal and Local . November 6, 2017 . U.N.M. Weekly . February 22, 1908 . 4.
  5. Book: Hooker, Van Dorn . Only in New Mexico: An Architectural History of the University of New Mexico . 2000 . UNM Press . Albuquerque . 0826321356 . 27.
  6. Mysteries of the Estufa . Shield & Diamond . Summer 2006 . 21–23 . 19 November 2013 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20131016110325/http://sd.pikes.org/606/sd606_3.pdf . October 16, 2013 .
  7. News: Uyttebrouck . Olivier . Frat Items Stolen Long Ago Resurface at UNM . Albuquerque Journal . February 23, 2002.
  8. News: The Estufa, Fraternal Secret Meeting Place, One of Features of University . November 6, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . October 28, 1955.
  9. News: Casaus . Phill . It's dumpy and frumpy, but UNM's Estufa packs a lot of history . November 7, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . October 28, 1995 . Newspapers.com.
  10. News: What is it? It's Estufa, and here's its history . November 7, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . September 22, 1952 . Newspapers.com.
  11. News: Estufa's burning for fourth time irks officials . November 6, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . September 12, 1947 . Newspapers.com.
  12. News: Leaking gas is blamed for U. fire . November 7, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . June 11, 1958 . Newspapers.com.
  13. News: Plan calls for widening University NE . November 7, 2017 . Albuquerque Journal . August 6, 1963 . Newspapers.com.
  14. Web site: History of UNM campus tour . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20050418055732/http://www.unm.edu/~unmarchv/Tour/Hist/stop05.html . April 18, 2005 .
  15. Web site: Campus Heritage Preservation Survey: University of New Mexico . December 2006 . University of New Mexico . October 30, 2017 . 153–154.