* Under construction
* 144,000 GSF
* $83 Million
* Scheduled to be completed in December 2013


What could they use it for? It's not that big of a space. I'm sure they'll turn it back into green space, which isn't a waste, in my opinion.Ps the triangle between this building and the bend in Harvard is a big waste that will never be used.
What could they use it for? It's not that big of a space.
Are you really suggesting there's a lack of green space here? Have you been north or east or west of this site? Besides, it doesn't look like it will be landscaped for actual use, it will just be another pointless ornamental lawn. What real cities do is they put their buildings right up against the street and then designate actual spaces for public use, using such methods as bricks and fountains. The U seems to be aiming more for suburban office park, the sort of place where this lawn would fit just fine.I'm sure they'll turn it back into green space, which isn't a waste, in my opinion.
Lawns don't actually work very well for intensive use, since it tends to kill the grass. When I worked at U of M Landcare we spent a lot of time reseeding the Mall and the main lawn at Coffman. Actually the most successful open spaces on campus use a combination of hardscaping and open lawns, like at Northrup or at the Alumni Center (cough a block from Physics & Nanotech cough). Those are able to attract people who prefer not to sit on the grass (otherwise known as snobs).What do you mean by "landscaped for actual use"? It'll be a lawn where students sit and study, or nap, or play frisbee, or whatever, just like the rest of the green spaces on campus.
Well I did put it in a PS - my main complaint about the building is the lack of ground floor windows on three of the faces Where I was going was that the building could have been aligned more on an east-west axis (the Cass Gilbert plan's influence pretty much faded away by this point) and freed space on the north end of the site for another building similar in footprint to Shephard Labs. Having looked at the site plan I don't think any of that is impossible, though, so I retract that criticism.This poor little piece of landscape seems an extra fussy thing to nit-pick over.
As recent U of M graduate who was a campus tour guide for three years, I will second thisI went to the U for 5 years, and i think the only time I ever used the Gopher Way was during my campus tour. Does anyone actually use that? And green space is a good thing in a campus like this with such density. I am all for a little green.
I'd argue that a university's use of green space / open space doesn't look to the suburban front lawns as a prototype -- there are much older antecedents to look to. Cambridge and Oxford are fairly obvious and potent archetypes for what campuses "ought" to look like. These campuses, in turn, are descended from even older monastic architecture. If these models are suburban (and they may well be), it's in a much older understanding of what the word meant.As for "a little green," the U is full of pointless little green spaces that exist solely to fulfill the suburban convention of the front lawn. They are typically not usable as open space. This may or may not end up as one of those spaces, it certainly is big enough to be functional. I don't think this part of campus is particularly worse for this, although the parking ramp has one, the Rec Center has one, the Armory and Field house each have one, Civil Engineering has two, Architecture has four, etc etc. The Rec Center addition mitigates this in its specific location and hopefully represents a change in direction for the U.
What exactly do you find monastically-derived about the U campus? Nolte and maybe Norris are all I can think of that really have elements. The Mall is much more Jeffersonian, either directly influence by the University of Virginia or through City Beautiful, and that comes more from the baroque notion of civic spaces I'd say. I'd be surprised if passionately deist Jefferson was very interested in monastic architecture.
I'm going to disagree with you on this one. I certainly don't love all of the buildings that you've cited, but I think that the University and the architects they hire spend more time thinking about building design and siting than just about anybody out there -- we may sometimes be less than thrilled with the results, but they're hardly just plopping buildings down. Even the stadium was some nice elements to its orientation -- the way the horseshoe opens up to campus and the skyline, and the view you get looking down 4th Street into the stadium.Regardless of the original basis for the campus form, they are mostly just plopping buildings down where ever they have room for them now, and typically they are placed without reference to their surroundings. Though that's less the case with the Rec Center Expansion and Physics & Nanotech (the former's shape really plays off that irksome bend in Harvard and the latter's boxiness is definitely a reference to Akerman), it is definitely the case with other recent buildings, such as the Carlson addition, the bioscience park, and the big kahuna stadium/spaceship.
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