Riggs Hall Riggs Hall, constructed in 1927 to house architecture and engineering, was the second Clemson building designed by Rudolph E. Lee, architecture program founder and college architect from 1911-1940. It is in the Italian Renaissance Revival style and features five carved grotesque heads on the third-floor façade. The building was named for Walter M. Riggs, professor of engineering, first football coach, acting president from 1909-1911, and president from 1911-1924. Breezeways were added to connect Riggs to the Cook Engineering Laboratory in 1965 and Rhodes Engineering Research Center in 1968. It was added to the National Register of Historic buildings in 1990.
433 Calhoun Drive, Clemson, United States