The day before demolition began on Memorial Hall I photographed all over it with a special 360° panorama camera (details below). Everything was as it had always been, with everything in its place. The last event had just ended, and the sun was still shining in the windows. I photographed until there was no more daylight left. - Richard Ginn

These 33 panoramas preserve a record of what it looked like to be inside and outside and look around in all directions: These are 'virtual photographs' which can only be seen on a computer screen, and which allow you to turn the image and look in all directions.

Full Screen Panoramas using QuickTimeVR

Apple QuickTimeVR (QTVR) allows the display of these panoramas in full-screen mode, QuickTime is a very common browser plugin but it is not always installed on every computer. If the image doesn't load at all you may need to download and install QuickTime from the Apple website. Should you need it, here is the link: stand-alone Quicktime install

The yellow links below will open this browser window to the size of your screen and display photographic images that you can rotate and tilt to look all around. Click, hold, and drag your mouse to navigate, and use your shift key (to zoom in) or control key (to zoom out).

The images are large and will take a minute to download over a modem connection.

The Panoramas

These are full 360° views.
Click, hold, and drag your mouse to navigate.

Scene 1 Scene 2 Scene 3
Scene 4 Scene 5 Scene 6
Scene 7 Scene 8 Scene 9
Scene 10 Scene 11 Scene 12
Scene 13 Scene 14 Scene 15
Scene 16 Scene 17 Scene 18
Scene 19 Scene 20 Scene 21
Scene 22 Scene 23 Scene 24
Scene 25 Scene 26 Scene 27
Scene 28 Scene 29 Scene 30
Scene 31 Scene 32 Scene 33

Camera: Nikon Coolpix 990. Lens: RemoteReality 360Plus.

Note: Image quality was good for 2002 but the technology has improved greatly since then.

Richard Ginn / Virtograph

Back back to previous page  Virtograph Home