Baker: About Face

Baker Library is empty of its books, staff, and readers. It is doing business elsewhere, at several locations both on and off the Business...

Baker Library is empty of its books, staff, and readers. It is doing business elsewhere, at several locations both on and off the Business School campus, and will do so for the next two years. (Meantime, the first floor of Kresge Hall is where one goes for help in accessing the collection.) Construction workers began in June to make a revised and enlarged edition of the school's principal library. It will reopen not merely renovated, with fine new internal parts, but reoriented, with its back toward the Charles River and its face toward Allston, where the University will expand in as-yet-unrevealed ways.

Architects' rendering of the Business School's new, reoriented Baker Library/Academic Center, its front facing Allston, its back to the Charles River. In the foreground are the existing South Hall at left, Aldrich Hall at right, and Cumnock Hall in the center.
Rendering courtesy of Mark Johnson / Harvard Business School

The building will have a new name, as well: the Baker Library/Academic Center. "We want to see how far we can push the envelope to make the library the intellectual hub of the campus," said Angela Crispi, M.B.A. '90, now associate dean for administration and senior executive officer, as planning for the project got underway several years ago. To that end, the building will house not only library materials, but faculty members, research associates, and other personnel who support research, teaching, and curriculum development, and will feature a new destination called "The Exchange," meant to be vibrant, where people can come together to interact and collaborate. In 2001 the firm of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson & Associates began developing the program for the revitalized library.

The facility was designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects, the firm responsible for the school's Georgian-style, and Allston-facing, Spangler Center (see "Classics, Old & New," March-April 2001, page 64). Plans call for "restoration" of historic library spaces—the lobby and the reading room (with improved lighting, better electrical and data connections, more varied seating options, and air conditioning)—and construction of new space. The southern half of the present structure will be demolished and the footprint of the building extended eight feet to the south. The finished edifice will be 160,000 square feet in size, an increase of 30,000 over the old.        

Most popular

What Trump Means for John Roberts’s Legacy

Executive power is on the docket at the Supreme Court.

Harvard Faculty Discuss Tenure Denials

New data show a shift in when, in the process, rejections occur

Leslie Jamison on Isolation, Empathy, and Selfhood

The essayist on isolation, empathy, and selfhood

Explore More From Current Issue

Six women interact in a theatrical setting, one seated and being comforted by others.

A (Truly) Naked Take on Second-Wave Feminism

Playwright Bess Wohl’s Liberation opens on Broadway.

Two small cast iron pans with berry-topped desserts, dusted with powdered sugar, alongside lemon slices.

Shopping for New England-Made Gifts This Holiday Season

Ways to support regional artists, designers, and manufacturers 

Aerial view of a landscaped area with trees and seating, surrounded by buildings and parking.

Landscape Architect Julie Bargmann Transforming Forgotten Urban Sites

Julie Bargmann and her D.I.R.T. Studio give new life to abandoned mines, car plants, and more.