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Click
on images for larger views. [Google Earth link]
The greedy and destructive ways of American universities
may seem like a lie when compared to the teaching and fostering
of (typically) young people that such schools see as their
role in society. But when one considers the footprints of
universities, in particular urban ones, and the displacement
of residents that many times accompanies the expansion of
schools, these ways are clear. Certainly some schools learn
to co-exist with cities and their residents -- buying up surrounding
buildings and renovating them to school functions, for example
-- but many, with the help of cities, find that co-existence
next to impossible. |
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One example of this unfortunate
state of secondary educational affairs is the University of
Illinois and Chicago (UIC),
located west of the Loop. Displacing thousands of largely
Italian residents for its inaugural opening in 1965, the school
has yet to let up, demolishing the remains of the historical
Maxwell
Street for its latest expansion. Given this history, it
was with some relief and surprise to see the Student Recreational
Facility (SRF)
taking over a University parking lot and tennis courts, not
neighbors' homes. As well, catty corner from the building is
Jane Addams Hull
House, an explicit reminder of the fabric the original
UIC replaced. |
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The SRF is designed by PSA-Dewberry
and Moody•Nolan,
the latter specializing in athletic facilities. One of two
such facilities on the campus (this is the east one, abutting
the Dan Ryan Expressway), the 150,000sf (14,000sm) building
is comprised of a four-court gym, exercise
equipment areas, leisure pool,
locker rooms, racquetball courts, multipurpose rooms, rock
climbing wall, and a 1/9th-mile jogging
track. What is certainly a big building doesn't appear
so, with sculpted massing on its street side and a variety
of materials articulating the volumes. |
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Much of the effort expended on
the design is focused on its internal circulation, from its
grand atrium entry to its
stair and bridges
linking the various levels. This "internal street"
is a fairly apt built metaphor for the University itself,
in this case in a building that at first glance looks like
it could signal a new direction for the school. But instead
of creating a public frontage on the street (with cafe and
shops, perhaps), connecting the building to the city, they've
created a private indoor street for students and faculty,
separated from the city. The tension between school and city
clearly still exists. Decent architecture is not enough to
heal those wounds. |
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UIC Student Recreational Facility in Chicago, Illinois
by Moody•Nolan & PSA-Dewberry |
2008.03.24 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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