- 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
By the 1990s the School of Architecture had outgrown Campbell Hall and was desperate for new common areas, faculty offices, and technologically savvy space for studios and reviews. Meeting the challenge of adding to a constrained site, architects on the faculty designed two compact, unabashedly modern additions.
W. G. Clark’s glass and concrete addition reorients the visitor to Campbell Hall. At night, light-filled review spaces become a colorfully lit grid advertising the design process at work inside.
William Sherman’s dramatically narrow and horizontal southern addition provides much needed faculty offices and indoor and outdoor meeting spaces.
Light, air, and people circulate fluidly through the three floors, invigorating the long, low, solid mass of Campbell Hall.