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Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
It is most surprising that Yale University is spending $126-million to renovate and add to a 1963 Modernist building that almost everyone has hated for decades. Aside from that, the project's champion is a high-society architect whose own career refutes pretty much the whole Modernist design theology. This article talks about the renovation of…
Descriptors: Universities, Colleges, School Buildings, Architecture
Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
In the early 1990s, Pomona College began planning to replace a cramped, plain building that had served as its campus center for decades. The Smith Campus Center, which was opened in 1999 and costs $18.3 million during construction, ended up being ignored by students. After tweaking things and achieving little results, the college decided to hire…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Educational Facilities Improvement, Educational Facilities Design, Costs
Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports several two-year institutions who are seeking out architects to create impressive new buildings as well as imaginative renovations of humdrum buildings from the 1960s and 1970s. Johnson County Community College, in Overland Park, Kansas, opened a limestone-sheathed museum, designed by Kyu Sung Woo Architects, that the "Kansas…
Descriptors: Museums, Two Year Colleges, Educational Facilities Design, School Buildings
Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
When "The Chronicle" asked college employees what they value about their jobs, they put the physical environment in which they work at the top of the list. They said they were concerned not only that their spaces met their needs but also that their campuses had a pleasing appearance. That's no surprise to Thomas G. Contos, university architect at…
Descriptors: School Personnel, Colleges, Work Environment, Physical Environment
Biemiller, Lawrence – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
The economic outlook may be sour for Wall Street's investment banks and for homeowners who took out mortgages they could not really afford, but campus planners and architects say that--so far, at least--colleges' construction plans are largely unaffected by the downturn. Some colleges, in fact, are trying to speed up projects to limit the damage…
Descriptors: School Construction, Educational Facilities Improvement, Operating Expenses, Financial Problems