Accessible entrances: There is lift on the east side of the building that provides the sole access the building. The visitor needs to be buzzed in for the doors to be unlocked.
Restrooms: Nearest accessible restrooms are located at the Residential and Student Services Building located at 2610 Channing Way.
Built 1898. Began life as the First Unitarian Church, designed by A.C. Schweinfurth. It was acquired by the university in 1960 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1981.
Buildings Details
Floors: 2
Accessible entrances: There is an accessible entrace on the east side of the building at the top of the ramp.
Restrooms: There is an usable restroom on the ground floor.
Accessibility features: There is an accessible drinking fountain outside the restroom.
Center for Southeast Asian Studies (1995 University Ave.)
The Center for Southeast Asia Studies is one of the oldest and most prominent academic centers concerned with Southeast Asia in the United States. CSEAS functions as an administrative base to promote attention at UC Berkeley to the countries and peoples of Southeast Asia and to encourage the growth of Southeast Asian Studies on campus.
Built 1998. Extension, Parking and Transportation, Summer Sessions, Procurement Services, Bluecard, Institute of East Asian Studies, Center for Southeast Asian Studies
Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (2521 Channing Way)
Built 1928. Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE), Institute for Research on Labor and Employment Library. An organized research unit of UC Berkeley, supporting multidisciplinary research about labor and employment relations in California.
Building Details
Floors: 4
Accessible entrances: One of the rear entrances is accessible
Restrooms: Restrooms with side transfer stalls are located in the first floor.
Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life (2121 Allston Way)
An archive, library and museum holdings include art, objects, texts, music, and historical documents about the Jews in the Global Diaspora and the American West.
Located at 2195 Hearst Ave, this high-tech building is home to several units of the campus’s Information Services and Technology unit, a central facility for campus IT and computing. The building provides a stable and secure home for much of the campus's data infrastructure. It was named in 2008 for the late Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Earl Warren -- a Berkeley graduate and former California governor -- after the demolition of the original Warren Hall, which was located on a nearby site.