Fahm-Hall

LOCATIONS AND FACILITIES

Fahm Hall

Majors offered
Jewelry and Objects

Address

1 N. Fahm St.
Savannah, Georgiadirections
Built in 1970, this 10,000 square-foot facility was originally the home of Ivan Allen office supply and interior design firm, then purchased by Joseph Byrd and Associates, a stock photography company next door. The space was acquired in 2001 by the university and now houses the jewelry and objects department. The facility boasts a computer lab equipped with 3-D modeling software and an FDM 3000 3-D printer, a gallery for finished products, a machine room, and a forming and casting room, among many other features. Jewelry and objects graduates can move on to successful careers as commercial designers, silversmiths and goldsmiths, lapidaries, accessory designers, enamellers and gem workers. The Center for Collaborative Learning, which brings together top industry professionals with talented potential employees, students and professors from SCAD, and the Fahm Gallery also reside in Fahm Hall.

Fahm Hall houses the jewelry and objects department, the Fahm Gallery and the Center for Collaborative Learning.

Click and drag photo to explore room.

Click and drag photo to explore room.

Fahm Hall offers facilities that promote a thorough understanding of the fields of metalwork and jewelry.

Fahm Hall offers state-of-the-art technology in student work areas.

Fahm Hall studios create an environment where graduate metals and jewelry students can focus on and sharpen their ideas.

Laser welding at Fahm Hall provides students with a practical way to create their designs.

Designs are created for various markets from fine and contemporary jewelry to the costume and fashion jewelry industries.

A student prototypes jewelry using 3-D CAD technology in Fahm Hall's computer lab.

See student creations.

Metals and jewelry students learn using state-of-the-art machinery as well as traditional processes.

Metals and jewelry students in Fahm Hall work with advanced, professional-level technology.

Craftsmanship and innovative design are cornerstones for metals and jewelry students.

Metals and jewelry students learn the necessary skills to explore precision casting at the Fahm Hall facility.

From sketching to prototyping, metals and jewelry students focus on conceptual thinking, innovation and craftsmanship.

Jewelry designer Gijs Bakker talks about style.