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Encyclopedia > Harkness Commons

The Harvard Graduate Center, also known as Harkness Commons, was commissioned of The Architects Collaborative by Harvard University in 1948. The first modern building on the campus, it was also the first endorsement of the modern style by a major university and was seen in the national and architectural presses as a turning point in the acceptance of the aesthetic in the U.S. The Architects Collaborative (TAC) was an American architectural firm founded by Walter Gropius in 1945 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. ... Harvard University (incorporated as The President and Fellows of Harvard College) is a private university in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA and a member of the Ivy League. ... Year 1948 (MCMXLVIII) was a leap year starting on Thursday (link will display the 1948 calendar) of the Gregorian calendar. ... For other uses, see United States (disambiguation) and US (disambiguation). ...


The Architects Collaborative, a modernist firm headed by Walter Gropius, was a bold choice for the typically traditional university. Though it cannot be said that Gropius was the sole designer, those that held strongly to his ideals collaboratively designed Harkness Commons. The Architects Collaborative (TAC) was an American architectural firm founded by Walter Gropius in 1945 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. ... Walter Adolph Georg Gropius (May 18, 1883 – July 5, 1969) was a German architect and founder of Bauhaus. ...


Coming from the Bauhaus, Gropius had been a pioneering innovator of educational architecture and many of his hallmarks can be seen years later in Harkness Commons. The physical Gropius hallmarks – large windows, flowing rooms, floating facades on raised pilotis – are all present here. Typography by Herbert Bayer above the entrance to the workshop block of the Bauhaus, Dessau, 2005. ... West facade of the Notre-Dame de Strasbourg Cathedral A facade (or façade) (Pronounced fa-sa-de) is generally the exterior of a building — especially the front, but also sometimes the sides and rear. ... Pilotis are special architectural supports, like columns, pillars, stilts, by which a building is lifted above what is underneath, may this be the ground or water. ...


More interestingly, in justifying the placement of these innovations at Harvard, Gropius reveals his passion, and activism, for the acceptance of modernism on college campuses. Gropius makes clear statements for specific innovations, “…Our contemporary architectural conception of an intensified outdoor-indoor relationship through wide window openings and large undivided window panes has ousted the small, cage-like, “Georgian” window.” But he is also more far reaching and makes what is now a commonplace case for architectural diversity and investment in current styles: “If the college is to be the cultural breeding ground for the coming generation, its attitude should be creative, not imitative”


Gropius advocates pushing architecture forward as the society needs it. He concludes by saying that “There is no finality in architecture – only continuous change.”


The building was completed in 1950, and was one of the first major projects in the TAC office. TAC may refer to: TAC (software), open source AIM client written in Tcl, using the TOC protocol Tactical Air Command, a former command of the United States Air Force charged with battlefield-level (tactical) air combat. ...


The buildings are now primarily used as a student center and as a dormitory complex for Harvard Law School. Harvard Law School (colloquially, Harvard Law or HLS) is one of the professional graduate schools of Harvard University. ...


References

  • “Graduate Center: Harvard University, Massachusetts,” Architects' Year Book (1953, vol. 5) London: P. Elek, 146.
  • Nancy MacLennan, “Harvard Decides to ‘Build Modern’,” New York Times , 25 October 1948, 25.
  • Walter Gropius, "Not Gothic But Modern For Our Colleges", New York Times, 23 October 1949.
  • The Architects Collaborative,; ed. Walter Gropius (and others). (Teufen, AR, Niggli, 1966). 63

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