The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture

This thesis looks at the tension between university administrators’ goals for their capital projects and the goals of end users, their students. These goals often diverge, given that universities must make decades-long financial decisions, while students’ experiences can be seen as more fleeting. Th...

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Main Author: Ebdy, Hugh T.
Other Authors: Schindler, Susanne
Format: Thesis
Published: Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/144791
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author Ebdy, Hugh T.
author2 Schindler, Susanne
author_facet Schindler, Susanne
Ebdy, Hugh T.
author_sort Ebdy, Hugh T.
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description This thesis looks at the tension between university administrators’ goals for their capital projects and the goals of end users, their students. These goals often diverge, given that universities must make decades-long financial decisions, while students’ experiences can be seen as more fleeting. This thesis investigates this tension and what it means for planning processes and architectural design. The research and analysis center on East Campus, the second oldest dormitory at MIT which opened in 1924. East Campus houses an active student culture based on self-governance, individualism, and privacy, and as the birthplace of hacking it is strongly tied to the wider public identity of MIT and how MIT is promoted to new students. As part of the MIT 2030 capital projects plan, East Campus was marked for renovation to bring it in line with contemporary living and accessibility standards, with construction originally slated to begin in the summer of 2022. However, given differences between MIT administrators and users in approach to undergraduate life, the author believes the renovation may spell the end of East Campus’ unique student culture. The author graphically and textually documents the early strategic and design stages of renovation, drawing on his experience as a resident advisor, discussions with students, staff, and consultants, and a seat on the renovation’s student/staff committee. The analysis of MIT’s functioning at the institutional level, its user engagement, as well as its conception of residential buildings reveals how certain processes may have negatively impacted the renovation’s potential. The author argues that a more ambitious design-led tone should be set before strategic options are agreed upon. He tests a set of interactive design games with users at the room, hall, and dormitory scales to gain a deeper understanding of how the East Campus community navigates space. The author translates these findings into an architectural proposal that emphasizes robustness as both a driver of sustainability and enabler of cultural communication. The thesis intends to re-center design in future MIT-led residential projects, which must balance user input, culture, budgetary demands, and donors.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1447912022-08-30T03:20:33Z The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture Ebdy, Hugh T. Schindler, Susanne de Monchaux, Nicholas Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Architecture This thesis looks at the tension between university administrators’ goals for their capital projects and the goals of end users, their students. These goals often diverge, given that universities must make decades-long financial decisions, while students’ experiences can be seen as more fleeting. This thesis investigates this tension and what it means for planning processes and architectural design. The research and analysis center on East Campus, the second oldest dormitory at MIT which opened in 1924. East Campus houses an active student culture based on self-governance, individualism, and privacy, and as the birthplace of hacking it is strongly tied to the wider public identity of MIT and how MIT is promoted to new students. As part of the MIT 2030 capital projects plan, East Campus was marked for renovation to bring it in line with contemporary living and accessibility standards, with construction originally slated to begin in the summer of 2022. However, given differences between MIT administrators and users in approach to undergraduate life, the author believes the renovation may spell the end of East Campus’ unique student culture. The author graphically and textually documents the early strategic and design stages of renovation, drawing on his experience as a resident advisor, discussions with students, staff, and consultants, and a seat on the renovation’s student/staff committee. The analysis of MIT’s functioning at the institutional level, its user engagement, as well as its conception of residential buildings reveals how certain processes may have negatively impacted the renovation’s potential. The author argues that a more ambitious design-led tone should be set before strategic options are agreed upon. He tests a set of interactive design games with users at the room, hall, and dormitory scales to gain a deeper understanding of how the East Campus community navigates space. The author translates these findings into an architectural proposal that emphasizes robustness as both a driver of sustainability and enabler of cultural communication. The thesis intends to re-center design in future MIT-led residential projects, which must balance user input, culture, budgetary demands, and donors. M.Arch. 2022-08-29T16:11:53Z 2022-08-29T16:11:53Z 2022-05 2022-06-16T20:08:26.347Z Thesis https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/144791 In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted Copyright retained by author(s) https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-EDU/1.0/ application/pdf Massachusetts Institute of Technology
spellingShingle Ebdy, Hugh T.
The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title_full The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title_fullStr The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title_full_unstemmed The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title_short The Renovation of East Campus: Control and Culture
title_sort renovation of east campus control and culture
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/144791
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