List of Brigham Young University Buildings - Former Buildings - Rented and Limited Use Buildings

Rented and Limited Use Buildings

These buildings have been used by Brigham Young University or Brigham Young Academy, but were never owned by the school.

Building Yr. Occ. Yr. Vac. Notes References
Creer Building 1971 This building was rented by the BYU Library for storage of less used books beginning in 1971 due to inadequate space in the Library. The library was expanded later in the 1970s. It was located at 744 South on 1st East Street in Provo.
First National Bank Building 1884 1884 This building was used immediately after the Lewis building burned Hatch, Ephraim and Karl Miller. Brigham Young University: A History of the Campus and the Department of Physical Plant 1875 to 1975 (Provo: Physical Facilities Division Brigham Young University:2001) p. 10
Provo Meetinghouse 1884 1884 Another location used in wake of the Lewis fire. Was on the location where the Provo Tabernacle was later built.
Provo Tabernacle 1900 2010 BYU used this building for Lyceums, commencement exercises, concerts and the like. It was BYU's only auditorium until 1941. Though always controlled directly by the LDS Church it was used for various BYU functions until it burned
S. S. Jones Store 1884 1884 another location used after the fire
Smoot Drug Store 1884 1884 used when the space provided in the First National Bank Building was not large enough
St. Francis School 1972 1975 This was a former Catholic grade school that BYU rented from the Catholic Church to use as the location of the J. Reuben Clark Law School until the current law school building was completed
Z.C.M.I. Warehouse 1885 In the fall of 1884 most of the Brigham Young Academy functions were consolidated into this building and it actually was better than the Lewis building which had burned

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    The desert is a natural extension of the inner silence of the body. If humanity’s language, technology, and buildings are an extension of its constructive faculties, the desert alone is an extension of its capacity for absence, the ideal schema of humanity’s disappearance.
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