Difference between revisions of "115th Street Brownstones"

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The '''115th Street Brownstones''' are three brownstone buildings on the south side of W. 115th Street (Nos. 408, 410, and 412) between [[Amsterdam Ave.]] and [[Morningside Drive]] that Columbia has slated for demolition over the objection of local politicians who want them preserved as historic exemplars of "the earliest built multiunit residential buildings that still stand in [[Morningside Heights]]." They are not to be confused with the [[law school]]-owned brownstones across the street.
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The '''115th Street Brownstones''' were three brownstone buildings on the south side of W. 115th Street (Nos. 408, 410, and 412) between [[Amsterdam Ave.]] and [[Morningside Drive]] that Columbia demolished over the objection of local politicians who want them preserved as historic exemplars of "the earliest built multiunit residential buildings that still stand in [[Morningside Heights]]." They are not to be confused with the [[law school]]-owned brownstones across the street.
  
 
== Plans for site ==
 
== Plans for site ==
Columbia has no known plans for the site once it is cleared. The site had been designated as the location of a proposed $126 million undergraduate dormitory that would constructed to accommodate a 15% increase in the enrollment at Columbia College (~600 students) envisioned by the [[Task Force on Undergraduate Education]]. The construction was to be funded in part by a yet-to-be-secured $60 million gift, despite the fact that the University had yet to secure a naming gift for Broadway Residence Hall over seven years after it had opened.<ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/ecfas/files/Faculty%20Forum%20minutes%203%20Dec%2007.htm ECFAS Faculty Forum on undergraduate education December 3, 2007]</ref> As it turned out, no gift was forthcoming, and the financial crisis of 2008 forced the University to expand enrollment immediately while abandoning the plan for the dormitory.<ref>[http://columbiaspectator.com/2009/03/25/enrollment-increase-coupled-faculty-wage-freeze-10-percent-phd-cut Enrollment increase coupled with faculty wage freeze, 10 percent Ph.D. cut], Columbia Spectator, 25 March 2009</ref> As a result graduate student building [[Harmony Hall]] was converted to undergraduate housing in 2009-2010, and [[548 W. 113th Street]], a brownstone typically reserved for [[fraternities]] or [[Special Interest Community|Special Interest Communities]] in 2010-2011.
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Columbia has no known plans for the site. The site had been designated as the location of a proposed $126 million undergraduate dormitory that would constructed to accommodate a 15% increase in the enrollment at Columbia College (~600 students) envisioned by the [[Task Force on Undergraduate Education]]. The construction was to be funded in part by a yet-to-be-secured $60 million gift, despite the fact that the University had yet to secure a naming gift for Broadway Residence Hall over seven years after it had opened.<ref>[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/ecfas/files/Faculty%20Forum%20minutes%203%20Dec%2007.htm ECFAS Faculty Forum on undergraduate education December 3, 2007]</ref> As it turned out, no gift was forthcoming, and the financial crisis of 2008 forced the University to expand enrollment immediately while abandoning the plan for the dormitory.<ref>[http://columbiaspectator.com/2009/03/25/enrollment-increase-coupled-faculty-wage-freeze-10-percent-phd-cut Enrollment increase coupled with faculty wage freeze, 10 percent Ph.D. cut], Columbia Spectator, 25 March 2009</ref> As a result graduate student building [[Harmony Hall]] was converted to undergraduate housing in 2009-2010, and [[548 W. 113th Street]], a brownstone typically reserved for [[fraternities]] or [[Special Interest Community|Special Interest Communities]] in 2010-2011.
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
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<references/>
 
<references/>
  
[[Category:Buildings on the Morningside Heights campus]]
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[[Category:Morningside Heights campus]]
 
[[Category:Unbuilt buildings]]
 
[[Category:Unbuilt buildings]]
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[[Category:Unbuilt residence halls]]

Latest revision as of 09:43, 14 April 2016

The 115th Street Brownstones were three brownstone buildings on the south side of W. 115th Street (Nos. 408, 410, and 412) between Amsterdam Ave. and Morningside Drive that Columbia demolished over the objection of local politicians who want them preserved as historic exemplars of "the earliest built multiunit residential buildings that still stand in Morningside Heights." They are not to be confused with the law school-owned brownstones across the street.

Plans for site

Columbia has no known plans for the site. The site had been designated as the location of a proposed $126 million undergraduate dormitory that would constructed to accommodate a 15% increase in the enrollment at Columbia College (~600 students) envisioned by the Task Force on Undergraduate Education. The construction was to be funded in part by a yet-to-be-secured $60 million gift, despite the fact that the University had yet to secure a naming gift for Broadway Residence Hall over seven years after it had opened.[1] As it turned out, no gift was forthcoming, and the financial crisis of 2008 forced the University to expand enrollment immediately while abandoning the plan for the dormitory.[2] As a result graduate student building Harmony Hall was converted to undergraduate housing in 2009-2010, and 548 W. 113th Street, a brownstone typically reserved for fraternities or Special Interest Communities in 2010-2011.

External links

References