Difference between revisions of "East Campus"

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70 Morningside Dr.<br>
 
70 Morningside Dr.<br>
 
New York, NY 10027
 
New York, NY 10027
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 +
==References==
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<references />
  
 
== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==

Revision as of 14:15, 28 December 2007

See also Wikipedia's article about "East Campus (Columbia University)".
East Campus
Eastcampus.jpeg
Built 1981
Renovated 1991
Townhouses in 2003
Floors 18-20 in 2004
Population 723
University Residence Halls
548 West 113th Street600 West 113th StreetBroadwayCarlton ArmsCarmanEast Campus47 ClaremontFurnaldHarmonyHartleyHoganJohn JayMcBainRiverRugglesSchapiroWallachWattWienWoodbridge

East Campus (in common parlance, EC) is the largest residence hall. It was built in 1981, was completely renovated in 1991, and has received additional renovations in 1997, 2002, and 2004. Technically, the high-rise part of EC is called "Hudson Hall" after SEAS alumnus Percy K. Hudson, but nobody calls it that. This is probably because EC is the dorm the furthest from the Hudson River.

East Campus has two main types of suites: townhouse suites and high-rise suites.

Groups need at least 2 seniors (as well as 1 junior and 2 sophomores) to get an Exclusion Suite. Only some groups with only 1 senior are usually able to get these suites.

The entrance to the dormitory building and the Heyman Center is located on Ancel Plaza. Entrance to the Center for Career Education, located in the bowels of the EC complex is located next to Wien Hall across from Faculty House.

History

An earlier plan for East Campus (1965), by Harrison and Abromowitz architects, included twin concrete slab towers.[1] Along with the rest of the ambitious expansion plans of University President Grayson L. Kirk, it was scrapped in the wake of the 1968 protests against, among other things, a university gym proposed for nearby Morningside Park. When expansion finally did reach East Campus, by the late 1970s, the university was seeking a more humanist design, one which would both harmonize better with the surrounding campus and reflect, to some degree, the residential college quads of Oxford and Yale.

When East Campus opened, students appreciated its expansive suite space, commanding views, and spacious townhouses, which were a relieving contrast to cramped conditions in much of the rest of the university's housing. Many of the outer townhouses were donated and built by famous Columbia University benefactors. The most notable of these is Thomas J. Watson, Jr. who donated the popular Watson House. Donor George Delacorte, for whom the building's central courtyard is formally named, said of his former room at the university "we had two nails on the wall for a closet...now I've paid for a dormitory where boys loll around in marble bathtubs." The bathrooms are not, however, actually marble, but imitate that material.[2]

On October 10, 1985, a SEAS student, Sarah M. Thomas, was stabbed in her East Campus suite by an intruder, a man who had been signed in as a guest by another resident. It was one of a number of violent crimes in the Columbia dormitories during the 1980s, including an infamous murder-suicide which took place in Ruggles.[3]

An inspection in 1987 revealed that the tiled exterior which had earned the building accolades had begun to peel off its facade, and a large chunk collapsed into its courtyard in February 1988, prompting the university to order its recladding, a $15 million project handled by the architects Gruzon Sampton Steinglass, in the campus' traditional red brick and limestone. In the course of the scandal, Columbia sued both Gwathmey Siegel and the engineering firm that had worked on the project.[4]

In 2006, a homophobic message written on a dry-erase board in East Campus was denounced as a hate crime, the sixth one alleged that year, and prompted the creation of the contrversial student group SHOCC.

Architectural responses

Ada Louise Huxtable, architecture critic of the New York Times:

"Consider a building that has to be vandal-proof, constructed of maintenance-free materials with every surface resistant to neglect and abuse, where violation of design and function must be an anticipated fact, along with defacement and petty thievery -- a place where surveillance is a necessity and population is transient. A description of a minimum security prison? Not at all. This is a dormitory for Columbia University... it is easy to see how an austerely simple aesthetic can be brought down to this dispiriting level..." (Architecture, Anyone? p.236)

Facilities

Every suite has a kitchen and bathroom.

Suites

  • 7 high-rise 5-person suites with 5 singles
  • 7 high-rise 6-person suites with 6 singles
  • 56 high-rise 5-person 'exclusion' suites with 3 singles and 1 double
  • 35 high-rise 2-person apartments
  • 10 townhouse 4-person suites with 4 singles.
Last one was taken by 30/1004 in 2003, 30/1327 in 2004, 30/785 in 2005, 30/398 in 2006.
  • 12 townhouse 6-person suites with 4 singles and 1 double.
Last one was taken by 30/2703 in 2003, 30/2743 in 2004, 20/600 in 2005, 30/2753 in 2006.
H1003, H1004, H603 and H803 are Greek.
H104, H203, H304, H403, H504, H704, H903, H904 are in the lottery
  • 28 townhouse 6-person suites with 6 singles
Last one was taken by ? in 2003, 30/1830 in 2004, 30/2913 in 2005, 30/1836 in 2006.

Advantages

  • Large suite lounges.
  • Suite bathrooms.
  • Recently-built.
  • Clean.
  • Strong community.

Disadvantages

  • Frequently malfunctioning highrise elevators.
  • Crazy lines at the security desk on weekends.

Images

The high-rise suite is 1410, and the townhouse is 1003.

Floor plans

Staff, as of Spring 2007

Main

  • Darleny Cepin, AD
  • Christabel Dadzie, GA

RAs

  • Katrina Ciraldo
  • Jinelle Craig
  • Easwaran Cumarasamy
  • Riddhi Dasgupta
  • Michelle Diamond
  • David Goldin
  • Angelica Gonzalez
  • Konny Huh
  • Shafaq Khan
  • Victoria Kwan
  • John Shekitka
  • Daniel Simhaee
  • Tao Tan, CPA
  • Nathalie Torres
  • Marianna Zaslavsky

Map

<googlemap lat="40.807049" lon="-73.959564" type="map" zoom="16" width="500" height="300" controls="small"> 40.807049, -73.959564, East Campus residence hall </googlemap>

Building address

70 Morningside Dr.
New York, NY 10027

References

  1. Unbuilt: Original East Campus Proposal at Morningside Heights neighborhood website
  2. "Columbia Dedicates New Suites and Townhouses for Students" in the New York Times, June 4, 1981
  3. "Intruder Stabs Student in Columbia Dormitory" by Keith Schneider in the New York Times, October 11, 1985
  4. "Columbia Dormitory, A New Facade," in the New York Times, June 23, 1991

External Links