Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
New Dorms and Dining
Collapse
X
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
I've seen the sketches of those dorms.
They don't match anything on campus, and I think they're, if nothing else, a testimony to the need for a school of architecture. They're a sort of neo-post-modern-collegiate gothic--a dreadful cliche that I'm pleased SDSU avoided the first time around. Having a school of architecture with graduates working on projects on this campus would, I trust, ensure architecture that displays at least a degree of respect for the architectural traditions of the campus.
Furthermore, it would be nice if the art department were not hemmed in by dorms. But in terms of siting, that's the only reasonable spot for new dorms.
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Originally posted by zooropa View PostI've seen the sketches of those dorms.
They don't match anything on campus, and I think they're, if nothing else, a testimony to the need for a school of architecture. They're a sort of neo-post-modern-collegiate gothic--a dreadful cliche that I'm pleased SDSU avoided the first time around. Having a school of architecture with graduates working on projects on this campus would, I trust, ensure architecture that displays at least a degree of respect for the architectural traditions of the campus.
Furthermore, it would be nice if the art department were not hemmed in by dorms. But in terms of siting, that's the only reasonable spot for new dorms.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
There are so many different styles of architecture on campus that any thing they put up will match something and conflict with something else.
And the architecture program is being explored as we speak.
You can't teach an old dog new tricks, but you can never teach a stupid dog anything.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Originally posted by 1stRowFANatic View PostThere are so many different styles of architecture on campus that any thing they put up will match something and conflict with something else.
And the architecture program is being explored as we speak.
Every building constructed from 1958 to 1975 (except the union and maybe Dairy Micro) was designed by Spitz's firm, and the quad into which this complex is being inserted was almost entirely of Spitz's doing (Harding Hall was, IIRC, Perkins & McWayne, pre WWII). The Grove complex & the Rotunda/henhouse were both done by Spitz.
Spitznagel did:
Waneta
Hansen
Mathews
Brown
Piersen
Grove Hall
Briggs Library
Frost Arena/Stanley J. Marshall Center
Crothers Engineering
Shepard Hall
Rotunda/Fine Arts
Young
Binnewies
Larson Commons
Medary Commons
Ag Engineering
Dairy Micro(?)
Harold Spitznagel also designed, IMO, the three best 'spaces' on campus: the Briggs library 'reading room' over the entry on the 2nd floor, the Brown Hall commons area, and (apparently) Petersen Recital Hall (formerly the Lincoln Library reading room).
---
The Avera sciences complex displays a respect for context that is entirely and utterly lacking in this residence scheme. About the best I can hope for is that the final plans display the respect that the built environment deserves.
---
And if SDSU does, in fact, get an architecture program by 2010, they'll be only one hundred years behind the curve for land grant institutions.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Work has started on the new dorms and dining facilities. A heck of a big site. Lots of work going on campus right now. Plus there is a Student Union expansion in the near future. Great growing times for SDSU. If I can figure out how to get a picture uploaded of the site I will do so.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Originally posted by zooropa View PostSpitznagel did:
Waneta
Hansen
Mathews
Brown
Piersen
Grove Hall
Briggs Library
Frost Arena/Stanley J. Marshall Center
Crothers Engineering
Shepard Hall
Rotunda/Fine Arts
Young
Binnewies
Larson Commons
Medary Commons
Ag Engineering
Dairy Micro(?)
---
And if SDSU does, in fact, get an architecture program by 2010, they'll be only one hundred years behind the curve for land grant institutions.Jackrabbits: Long ears, strong hind legs, gritty, relentless, fearless.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Originally posted by WestSideRabbit View PostThe residence halls that you listed are some of the ugliest buildings on campus. There is nothing to them. If that is what architecture is supposed to look like then well... The new halls were designed to be NEW! Every step of the new hall was put before the Students' Association and focus group for critiques and changes. This is what they wanted. The east side of campus is going to be amazing with the Union, the new residence hall, and the Wellness Center. If Grove Hall is near and dear to you, then I suggest taking a picture soon.
But the proportions, placement, and massing of them are superb. Take a drive around campus sometime. You'll find that many of those dorms 'cap' a city street and form a barrier around the campus, creating a definite city/campus boundary that did not exist before.
Look down 9th Avenue: Hansen Hall terminates it. 14th: Brown Hall, 16th: Binnewies. (with other Spitznagel buildings: 13th is terminated, across the green by Rotunda and the NFA building and the HPER terminates 11th St.)
Here's a contemporary dorm from the neighbors up north:
The NDSU dorm (Reed Johnson Hall) is poorly massed, ill-proportioned, and while the windows are bigger (see earlier mention of budget constraints), the building itself has none of the elegance of massing that Spitz's buildings have. The Spitznagel residences have a 1/3-2/3rds brick and window rhythm (vs. the lack of any proportion between the windows in Reed Johnson Hall), and the building's height is reflected in its floorplan, to create well proportioned setbacks, end-caps, and stair towers:
2) Focus groups are no substitute for talent
3) Grove Hall isn't being demoed--look at the renderings.
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
Originally posted by zooropa View Post1) Those dorms were budget constrained
Comment
-
Re: New Dorms and Dining
I meant 'budget constrained' as in 'unreasonably so....', as in 'we need room for 400 students, but the budget will only accommodate 300'
As in the Stanley Marshall center having its footprint reduced by a third with almost no concession on program requirements.
Comment
Comment