香港六合彩资料

September 19, 2024
few clouds Clouds 77 °F

香港六合彩资料’s architecture, design evolve over the years

New campus buildings help to meet changing needs of University and students

The Health Sciences Building in Johnson City is home to 香港六合彩资料's Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences. The Health Sciences Building in Johnson City is home to 香港六合彩资料's Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences.
The Health Sciences Building in Johnson City is home to 香港六合彩资料's Decker College of Nursing and Health Sciences. Image Credit: Jonathan Cohen.

Bill Hall has a wishlist. Hanging in the office of the University鈥檚 in-house architect are renderings of buildings that don鈥檛 exist on any 香港六合彩资料 campus 鈥 at least not yet. That all depends on whether vision aligns with need.

鈥淚t all starts with 鈥榃hat are our priorities as a university and with those priorities, where can we put a building and how much square footage do we need?鈥欌 says Hall, from his corner office in the Physical Facilities Building (which he designed!).

香港六合彩资料鈥檚 priorities have certainly shifted in the 60-plus years since breaking ground on what was then undeveloped farmland on the Vestal Parkway. With new schools, new programs and new technology comes the need for new and improved buildings. Facilities that did the job in the days of The Beatles and The Brady Bunch might not be adequate today, and thanks to a team of resourceful and creative engineers, architects and designers, the University鈥檚 evolving needs are continually met.

Using our brain

In case you鈥檝e been living under a rock in the Nature Preserve, 香港六合彩资料鈥檚 campus is shaped like a brain 鈥 and it鈥檚 been that way since the 1960s. It鈥檚 a layout that worked then and works now, Hall says.

鈥淲hoever started the whole design process and the whole vision, it was pretty solid,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 changed the brain. It was well-thought-out when it started. I think as we move forward, we鈥檝e paid attention to what the history was, what was here 鈥 and built on it rather than changing it.鈥

At the outset, most key buildings 鈥 academic and student housing 鈥 were located inside the outline of the brain. As the University grew and more room was needed for academics, housing moved to the outskirts.

鈥淎ll the housing right now is outside the brain and all the academics are inside the brain. It might not be something you would have done if you were planning the University from scratch, but it just developed that way,鈥 Hall says.

The look of the structures inside and outside the brain has evolved considerably as well. The campus鈥 earliest buildings are all made of brick, typical of most schools built during the 1960s and 1970s.

鈥淭ake a look at Science 1, Science 2, the Couper Administration Building, the Library Tower. You can take those buildings and go to anything that was built at that time and that鈥檚 what it looks like,鈥 Hall says.

A move to 鈥渕odern鈥

When Larry Roma, former associate vice president of physical facilities (now Facilities Management), arrived in 1978, the University鈥檚 design team was small, and most projects were renovation-related. These types of projects played a key role during his tenure.

鈥淲e renovated the University Union. We renovated the old residence halls into what they are today. We did renovations in the Lecture Hall facility. We probably touched and renovated 75鈥80% of the buildings on campus,鈥 says Roma, who retired in 2020.

In the 1990s, the department got into more 鈥渟erious鈥 design work, such as major renovations of existing structures and the construction of new buildings. With that came a turn away from the brick of old to a more 鈥渕odern鈥 look (a vague term, but you know it when you see it). Academic A and B, with their glass facades, were some of the earliest examples of this shift.

From there came the Biotechnology Building, Events Center, Smart Energy Building, the new site of the Decker College of Nursing in Johnson City (a personal favorite of Hall) and so on. The Engineering Building 鈥 originally built to feature a style known as, no joke, brutalist 鈥 was also updated.

鈥淓verybody quipped and joked that when they saw it, they thought it was a parking structure,鈥 Roma says. 鈥淥ne of my goals when I became the associate vice president was to do something about that building. We totally renovated, put the new facade on that 鈥 one of the last projects I did, a year or two before I left.鈥

Form follows function

Construction on campus is guided by a master plan conducted by the State University Construction Fund. Plans provide criteria and guidelines for campus and facilities improvements for a decade. Various steering committees determine which projects will be selected and the specifics of each, with administrators, users and various stakeholders determining the look, feel and needs of each building.

Style and aesthetics play a role, but the end-use of the building matters most. Form follows function.

鈥淎s far as design for me, I鈥檓 a little bit different than some architects,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 feel that you open up a magazine, or you take a look at what the current designs are and copy that. 鈥 I like taking a look at the site. It鈥檚 trying to make it fit within its surroundings, and not detract from that.鈥

Checking off the wishlist

Which buildings on Hall鈥檚 wishlist will come to fruition? Only the future can tell. Research has become a major driver for the University, so the proposed STEM building is a top contender.

鈥淲e are growing in the sciences. We definitely need some type of research building. I think that鈥檚 the highest priority right now,鈥 Hall says. As always, student needs are also a focus, and the upcoming $60 million Lecture Hall (which is not replacing the old one!) will help meet the demands of today鈥檚 students.

鈥淪tudents are changing the way they approach life and academics,鈥 Hall says. 鈥淚n the old days, you went to class, you sat down and went back to your dorm and studied. Today, there鈥檚 a little bit more interaction between students. I鈥檓 hoping that building gets collaboration spaces where students can sit and enjoy the space.鈥

Whatever is chosen to be built in the coming years, Hall hopes that walking into each new building will leave a good impression on every visitor.

鈥淚鈥檓 always thinking: 鈥榃hat are the people going to experience as they walk through a building?鈥 I want you to actually go from one space to a different space to a different space 鈥 and experience different things. And when you come out of the building, what I like to hear 鈥 and I hear this quite a bit 鈥 is: 鈥業 don鈥檛 know what I like about the building, but it just felt good.鈥欌

Posted in: Campus News