A Communal Campus?

President Drew Faust on April 24 appointed a University steering committee to explore improvements to Harvard’s Cambridge campus, with the aim...

President Drew Faust on April 24 appointed a University steering committee to explore improvements to Harvard’s Cambridge campus, with the aim of making better use of existing spaces to foster faculty-student interaction, social life, and artistic and cultural performances. The goal is to effect improvements in the areas near Harvard Yard, even as planning proceeds for the long-term development of the academic facilities in Allston. (For the news release on the steering committee, and its members, see www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/2008/05.01/99-openspaces.html.)

Sites that might be improved include the front and rear Holyoke Center plazas; the Science Center plaza; the new quadrangle framed by the Music Building, LISE, and McKay; the south side of the Malkin Athletic Center (below); and the courtyard formed by the Bauer, Fairchild, and Converse laboratories.

The front Holyoke Center plaza

The rear Holyoke Center plaza

The Science Center plaza

The south side of the Malkin Athletic Center

The task force co-chairs are Lizabeth Cohen, Jones professor of American studies, whose scholarship and teaching are deeply involved with American urban design and physical planning (see her home page and c.v. at www.courses.fas.harvard.edu/~history/facultyPage.cgi?id=9), and Mohsen Mostafavi, dean of the Graduate School of Design, who is professor of architecture (see “A New Dean Designs without Borders,” November-December 2007, page 70).

The steering committee will work with the University Planning Office to identify sites capable of being improved physically and put to new programmatic uses. Among the spaces that come to mind are the plazas in front of the Science Center and those to the front and rear of Holyoke Center; there is also extensive space south of Malkin Athletic Center, facing Kirkland, Eliot, and Winthrop Houses.

The initiative will also complement the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ current planning for wholesale renovation of the undergraduate residential houses during the next decade or so (see "What Makes (and Remakes) a House"); that effort includes evaluation of what new kinds of uses and spaces should be accommodated within the residences, and what should be shared among them. Faust has also commissioned a task force on the arts at Harvard, scheduled to report this autumn (see “Approaching the Arts Anew,” January-February, page 51); its recommendations could obviously contribute to fresh thinking about enhancing spaces for performance uses.

In her charge to the committee, Faust wrote, “Our goal is to provide spaces that will draw people together for work or pleasure in a spontaneous and informal way.” She cited a desire to create “visible, attractive, and inviting campus ‘focal points’ that will improve our Cambridge campus and create a sense of place that is distinctly Harvard’s, yet open to the city and surrounding communities,” and to recommend programs complementary to the spaces, resulting in “gathering places that are open and inviting to everyone, so that undergraduates, graduate students, faculty, staff, alumni, and visitors see them as appealing spaces to meet, talk, sit, read, work, reflect, or rest.” (Forward suggestions to commonspaces@harvard.edu.)

The committee’s interim recommendations are expected by this winter, with detailed feasibility studies (prepared by the planning office) completed by the fall of 2009. If that timing holds, the recommendations could be incorporated into the goals for a forthcoming University capital campaign, expected to take shape by the end of the decade.

Related topics

You might also like

Can We Disagree Better? A Harvard Professor Has Tips.

Kennedy School professor of public policy Julia Minson on how to improve political conversations

Öberg to Lead Harvard Faculty Recruitment and Retention

The astrochemist will become senior vice provost for faculty affairs this summer.

The Celts in Art and Imagination

A new exhibition at the Harvard Art Museums traces 2,500 years of Celtic art.

Most popular

Inside Harvard’s Most Egalitarian School

The Extension School is open to everyone. Expect to work—hard.

“The Grand Wake for Harvard Indifference”

At noon on November 16, 1938, some 500 Harvard and Radcliffe students jammed Emerson Hall to express their outrage at Kristallnacht, as the...

How a Harvard Hockey Legend Became a Needlepoint Artist

Joe Bertagna’s retirement project recreates figures from Boston sports history.

Explore More From Current Issue

Four Labrador puppies—two black and two yellow—sitting in green grass.

What Do Puppies Know?

Canine capabilities emerge early and continue into adulthood.

A diverse group of individuals standing on stage, wearing matching shirts and smiling.

How a Harvard and Lesley Group Broke Choir Singing Wide Open

Cambridge Common Voices draws on principles of universal design. 

A lively street scene at night with people in colorful costumes dancing joyfully.

Rabbi, Drag Queen, Film Star

Sabbath Queen, a new documentary, follows one man’s quest to make Judaism more expansive.