Difference between revisions of "Manhattanville campus"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
[[Image:Jestermville.jpg|thumb|Cover of the ''[[Jester]]'' depicting, in stained glass, an allegory of God sending an angel to present the plans for the Manhattanville expansion to [[PrezBo]] and [[Richard Kasdin]]]]
 +
 
In the summer of [[2003]], President [[Bollinger]] announced the University's intention to build a extension/satellite campus. The '''Manhattanville campus''' is an 17 acre planned development in the [[Manhattanville]] neighborhood of [[Manhattan]], an area bound by [[125th Street|125th]] and 133rd Streets between [[Broadway (avenue)|Broadway]] and 12th Avenue. 6.8 million square feet of space will be built in phases and completed by [[2030]].  
 
In the summer of [[2003]], President [[Bollinger]] announced the University's intention to build a extension/satellite campus. The '''Manhattanville campus''' is an 17 acre planned development in the [[Manhattanville]] neighborhood of [[Manhattan]], an area bound by [[125th Street|125th]] and 133rd Streets between [[Broadway (avenue)|Broadway]] and 12th Avenue. 6.8 million square feet of space will be built in phases and completed by [[2030]].  
  

Revision as of 04:34, 27 April 2008

Cover of the Jester depicting, in stained glass, an allegory of God sending an angel to present the plans for the Manhattanville expansion to PrezBo and Richard Kasdin

In the summer of 2003, President Bollinger announced the University's intention to build a extension/satellite campus. The Manhattanville campus is an 17 acre planned development in the Manhattanville neighborhood of Manhattan, an area bound by 125th and 133rd Streets between Broadway and 12th Avenue. 6.8 million square feet of space will be built in phases and completed by 2030.

Columbia has retained world renowned architect Renzo Piano to lay the master plan for the expansion, a plan which President Bollinger has insisted must be implemented either in whole or not at all. Current plans call for the first phase of construction to include new sites for the Business School, the School of the Arts, the newly created Jerome L. Greene Science Center, and the Columbia Science, Math and Engineering Secondary School a public Magnet school under Columbia's direction for children of northern Manhattan residents.

Columbia's Manhattaville campus expansion has been somewhat controversial. See the main article at Manhattanville controversy.

Renderings

Early plans

Current plans

Map

<googlemap lat="40.817853" lon="-73.957837" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small">

  1. 758bc5

40.820004, -73.958877 40.818811, -73.956023 40.819438, -73.955573 40.819036, -73.954685 40.81846, -73.955112 40.818389, -73.955315 40.817425, -73.955592 40.81709, -73.955795 40.817542, -73.956949 40.815443, -73.958454 40.817502, -73.960696 40.820004, -73.958877 </googlemap>

External links