|
Follow Us:
Home
Features
Feature Stories
Videos
Blogs
News
Development News
Innovation News
In The News
Focus
Alternative Energy
Entrepreneurship
Film And Video
Green Building
Higher Education
Internet
Life Sciences
Software Design
Venture Capital
Video Game Design
Web 2.0
Growing Companies
Jobs
Jobs Landed
Jobs Available
Internships Available
Places
Ann Arbor
Chelsea
Dexter
Saline
Ypsilanti
FilterD
Matt Jones recording with Misty Lyn and Colette Alexander at Backseat Productions - Ann Arbor - Doug Coombe
|
Show Photo
Development News
U-M opens North Quad to 450 students, classes
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Related Tags
Downtown Living
,
Government
,
Green Building
,
Higher Education
,
Historic Preservation
,
Redevelopment
,
University Of Michigan
Ann Arbor
For the first time in 43 years, the University of Michigan will be opening a new student residence. Next week students move into the North Quadrangle Residential and Academic Complex.
North Quad
, at Washington and Thayer streets on U-M's campus, will be home to 450 undergrads as well as the
School of Information
and some of the
College of Literature, Science and the Arts
. The seven-story academic tower and 10-story residential tower connect classrooms, offices, study centers and corridors beneath the plaza between the towers.
Peter Logan, director of communication for
University Housing
, explains that blending living and learning spaces enforces that the learning environment isn't confined to the classroom, and living isn't confined to the residence halls. "The co-location of academic and residential facilities creates opportunities for a real dynamic community in the North Quadrangle facilities," he says. "It serves as an important new gateway for central campus that ties very nicely in with the State Street community and with the other portion of central campus."
Common areas, television and video production studios, and a Media Gateway are among the features of the new, 360,000-square-foot, $175 million building. Logan says technology was considered throughout the entire planning of North Quad, to the point that they kept it flexible enough to accommodate any advancements during the years it was being planned.
That reflects not only insight by design and planning groups, but student input as well, he says. "Technology plays an important part in their ability to connect with each other, across campus and across the world," he says.
Green technology was also used for North Quad; features include additional insulation, energy-efficient windows, motion-sensor lighting, and low-flow plumbing. North Quad sits on the site of the former Frieze Building, which was once the Ann Arbor High School, and the north face of the new residence hall incorporated the façade of the former Carnegie Library.
When students move in, "they’re going to love it," Logan says. "It's a marvelous facility. I think it really will do a lot to promote learning. It certainly takes the living experience on campus to a new standard."
Source: Peter Logan, director of communication for University of Michigan Housing
Writer: Kristin Lukowski
Give us your email and we will give you our weekly online magazine. Fair?
Share this page
Share
Tweet
0
Email
0
Print
Give us your email and we will give you our weekly online magazine. Fair?