November 20, 2009, 01:27 PM ET
A New Garden at the U. of California at Davis Honors Patwin People
A new contemplation garden at the University of California at Davis honors the Patwin people, who once inhabited the land that became the campus. The garden, part of the university's 100-acre arboretum, is located on the bank of Putah Creek and includes 34 kinds of trees and plants that the Patwin used. The garden identifies many by their Patwin names.

The shape of a seating area in the new garden at the U. of California at Davis recalls the initial coil of a Patwin basket. (U. of California at Davis photo)
The garden also includes a series of engraved basalt columns, one of which records the names of 51 Patwin men, women, and children who were removed to missions between 1817...
Read MoreNovember 20, 2009, 10:00 AM ET
Shop Talk: Friday, November 20
Campus architecture and facilities news from around the Web:

• Georgetown U. Shows Off a 10-Year Campus Plan (Left: the plan; Georgetown U. image)
• Virginia Tech and Blacksburg Pursue Sustainability Together
• Blue Mountain Community College Plans New Facility in Hermiston, Ore.
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Read MoreNovember 19, 2009, 08:52 AM ET
U. of California at Berkeley Backs Away From Plans for a $143-Million Art Museum
The University of California at Berkeley has scrapped high-profile plans for a $143-million art museum by the Tokyo firm Toyo Ito & Associates Architects, the museum's director said Wednesday. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, the university canceled the project after raising only $81-million of the $200-million it sought in a capital campaign for the museum. But the museum's director, Lawrence Rinder, said it would still build an "innovative and affordable" new museum at some point.
The Toyo Ito building, planned for a site in downtown Berkeley, was to have replaced museum's current home, a poured-concrete Modernist structure on Bancroft Way that dates to 1970. Designed by Mario Ciampi and associates Richard...
Read MoreNovember 19, 2009, 08:00 AM ET
Shop Talk: Thursday, November 19
Campus architecture and facilities news from around the Web:

• 1914 Yale Bowl Gets a $30-Million Modernization (Left: the stadium's new entrance; Yale U. photo)
• Contractors Vie for Yale Construction Projects That Aren't on Hold
• In Iowa, Scott Community College Breaks Ground for Culinary-Arts Facility
November 18, 2009, 02:30 PM ET
Student Interest in Sustainability Rises, Despite Lack of Curricular Support
The National Wildlife Federation is releasing a report today that documents more than 160 student-led projects in sustainability and offers tips on how to start similar projects on campuses across the country.
Julian Keniry, director of the Campus Ecology program at the federation, said that the examples in the report document what many have observed about the current sustainability movement: There is unprecedented student interest in sustainability issues that has given rise to a diverse set of activities.
Ms. Keniry also said interest in sustainability cuts across some geographic and political demographics. "We have been impressed by the breadth of involvement," she said. "They are schools small and large, state, public, and private."
And although sustainability programs...
Read MoreNovember 18, 2009, 07:00 AM ET
Shop Talk: Wednesday, November 18
Campus architecture and facilities news from around the Web:
• Trustees Approve $200-Million Facelift for Kent State's Main Campus
• Housing Project for U. of Minnesota at Rochester Is Back on Track
• U. of Tennessee Architecture Students Reimagine a Vast, Empty Mill Building
November 18, 2009, 12:19 AM ET
'USA Today' Gets an Early Look at Bush Library Plans

Former President George W. Bush is to unveil this design for his presidential-library complex at Southern Methodist U. Wednesday afternoon. (Robert A.M. Stern Architects renderings)
The George W. Bush Presidential Library at Southern Methodist University will be a fairly contemporary structure whose clean lines call to mind the shapes of Georgian architecture without replicating its ornament and details, according to drawings that the former president and his wife, Laura Bush, are scheduled to release at a press conference this afternoon.
But USA Today had the drawings online Tuesday evening, along with an article that described "a lantern-shaped roof that will...
Read MoreNovember 17, 2009, 02:48 PM ET
Adding Modern Amenities to Old Buildings Raises Ire at Cambridge
Any facilities administrator or campus architect who has had to add ramps, elevators, heating-and-cooling systems, and other modern features to grand old college buildings will appreciate this article. The Guardian reports on controversies at Britain's venerable universities, as officials try to balance modern additions with historical sensitivity.
At the University of Cambridge's Old Schools, people noticed a hole in the floor of the Regent House Combination Room and wondered if maintenance people were fixing the pipes or somesuch. When they found out the university was putting in an elevator, they were appalled.
"It is historically the most important room in the universities of the English-speaking world. It is the cradle of Cambridge's democracy, our...
Read MoreNovember 17, 2009, 10:00 AM ET
Shop Talk: Tuesday, November 17
Campus architecture and facilities news from around the Web:

• Monmouth U. Activity Center Fulfills Longtime Wish (Left: the Multipurpose Activity Center, designed by Ewing Cole Cherry Brott; Monmouth U. photo)
• Parking Problems Plague U. of West Florida
• New Dalton State College Building Will Also Serve Dual-Enrollment Students at Adjoining High School
November 16, 2009, 01:50 PM ET
New Campus Buildings for Business, Reflection, Living, and Learning

Hunter Hall is Southern Vermont College's first new building in 17 years. (Southern Vermont College photo)
Southern Vermont College has opened a 41,000-square-foot, $7.5-million building that mixes living space for 110 students with a science lab, a computer lab, offices, a wellness center, and a glassy atrium. The building—the college's first new structure in 17 years—also includes a simulation lab in which nursing students can practice procedures on interactive patient simulators. Called Hunter Hall, the building was designed by Centerline Architects.


