- The Academical Village
- The Romantic Picturesque
- Re-imagining Jefferson: McKim, Mead & White at the University
- The University Beautiful
- Modern Suburban University
- University Recentered
- Appendix I: The Design Process
- Appendix II: Architectural Artifacts
- Appendix III: Buildings and Architects
- Acknowledgments
- Use and Copyright Information
In 1992, the Darden School of Business moved next door to a lavish, new campus designed by acclaimed architect Robert A.M. Stern. The Darden School rejected the stark modernism of Stubbins’s complex and returned to a traditional architectural vocabulary, while its relative isolation and scale orient it to the automobile. The reference to Jefferson’s Academical Village is clear. Made of red brick and white columns, rows of buildings on either side of a lawn flank a raised, pedimented building.
Stern first flexed his post-modern muscle at the University in the now-demolished Observatory Hill Dining Hall in 1983. His rehabilitation hid a shed-roofed, modern building built in the early 1970s with pavilion-like porches, Tuscan columns, Chinoiserie railings, and a brick arcade.