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A r c h i t e c t u r a l D e s i g n Guidelines Architectural Design Guidelines 2003 2003 Printed on recycled paper LIST OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION History Future Growth Purpose & Organization of Architectural Design Guidelines GOALS AND OBJECTIVES 1 2 5 6 A Firm Basis for Design Goals and Objectives Defined Goals for Campus Architecture 7 8 9 10 FEATURE AND SUPPORT BUILDINGS 13 PRIMARY BUILDINGS ON THE CAMPUS 15 18 36 45 62 69 Central Campus - Quad District Central Campus - Storer Mall District Central Campus - Silo District Central Campus - South Entry District Health Sciences District THE CORE CAMPUS DISTRICTS Long Range Development Plan 77 78 ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN GUIDELINES Building Siting & Orientation - Neighborhoods and Boundaries - Evolving Campus Core - Axial Relationships - Primacy of pedestrians - Service Access - Setbacks and Streets - Building Entrances and Views - Views from buildings - Orientation, sun and daylight - Natural Ventilation - Windows function and scale - Blank walls - Glare and glazing Building Uses & Activity - Building use and human scale - Active building frontages - Building entrances - Bike storage - Temporary buildings Building Configuration & Appearance - Massing, scale and character - Building height - Roof forms - Screening equipment - Materials and Longevity - Materials exceptions - Materials and colors 81 82 98 104 LIST OF CONTENTS CONTINUED Building Structure -Seismic stability and flexibility -Equipment space 113 Building Stewardship & Sustainability - Life cycle costs - Natural ventilation - Solar gain controls - Trees and daylight - Water conservation - Irrigation - Local materials - Environmentally sound materials - Durability and maintenance - Air quality - Reclamation and recycling 115 CAMPUS FURNITURE DESIGN GUIDELINES 121 Lighting Seating Trash Receptacles Bicycle Racks Bollards Poles Signage Traffic Controls Fountains Drinking Fountains Sculpture and Other Art Pieces Telephones Newspaper Vending 122 124 125 126 127 128 128 128 129 130 131 132 132 Introduction Int roduction 1 HISTORY In his memoirs, former Chancellor Emil M. Mrak remarked, “In designing the campus, you have to consider space, beauty, color, the nature of buildings.” The purpose of these Architectural Design Guidelines is to identify and define the nature of buildings appropriate to the UC Davis campus. To do so, one must understand the character of the campus and the many facets that make it unlike any other. A logical place to begin that analysis is the history of the University, from its earliest days as a small farm school in Davisville to its current esteemed position among the world’s leading research and teaching institutions specializing in biological, environmental and agricultural sciences. In 1905, the State Legislature approved establishment of a state agricultural school, and the following year, 778 acres were purchased from the Jerome C. Davis farm. Seventy two miles northeast of San Francisco and 15 miles from Sacramento, the ‘Aggies,’ as students were known were isolated on their campus. There were just 18 students when University Farm School opened in 1909. The first four-year degree program was established in 1922, and in 1938 the campus was renamed the College of Agriculture at Davis. There was a hiatus during WW II when the 2 The University Farm School opened in 1909. The main campus was organized around an axial avenue that ran north from the library entrance across the Quad all the way to Russell Boulevard (1956 Master Plan). Introduction campus was devoted to military training. After the war, programs diversified, and a period of vigorous growth began. This change was formally recognized by the Regents in 1959 with designation of UC Davis as a comprehensive campus. The College of Engineering, and the schools of Law and Medicine were established during the following decade. Today, over 26,000 students are enrolled, with access to more than one hundred undergraduate majors, and 75 graduate programs. The original 778 acres have grown to 5,200, and the neighboring community of Davis has grown into a city of 52,000 people. The University comprises three colleges: College of Letters & Sciences: Mathematics & Physical Sciences; Humanities, Arts & Cultural Studies; Social Sciences. College of Engineering: Departments cover 15 different disciplines of engineering. College of Agricultural & Environmental Sciences: Departments include basic biology, applied natural & social sciences. The library entrance brings students of many disciplines together. Perhaps because of its early isolation, UC Davis has always supported a vigorous student life on campus, with a diversity of sports teams, clubs and other social and quasi-academic activities. Most students live on or near the campus. The flat terrain of the Central Valley make bicycles an ideal mode of transport, and fifty miles of bike paths extend from the auto-free center of the campus, through the city of Davis and into the surrounding countryside. Strong environmental awareness has further promoted cycling as the transport of choice, so bicycles are to be found everywhere on campus, making their accommodation at every building a necessity. 3 A unique feature of the campus is the 125 acre University Arboretum located along the north fork of Putah Creek. While it fulfills its intended use as an outdoor classroom and laboratory for teaching and research, the arboretum and stream establish a strong identity for the 800 acre central campus at its south entrance. 4 The Arboretum is a botanical collection as well as a place to relax. Introduction FUTURE GROWTH As the University population grows, temporary buildings will be replaced by larger, permanent structures. During the first decade of this century, the student population at UC Davis is expected to grow from 26,000 to 31,000; an average annual growth rate of 2.2 percent. Faculty will grow by 600 over the same period. Besides the classrooms, laboratories and student facilities needed to accommodate this increase, evolving demands of teaching and research will be evident throughout the campus as buildings are remodeled and expanded, and as new buildings are added. The need for flexibility in new buildings to accept subsequent change is clearly necessary. 5 PURPOSE & ORGANIZATION OF THE ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN GUIDELINES Architectural design guidelines can frame valued qualities of the built environment in a non-prescriptive yet helpful way to assist those who commission, design and review new construction, remodels and extensions of buildings on the campus. Their purpose is to ensure consistency in quality, and suitability in location, orientation and function between valued existing structures and those that are yet to be conceived. There is clearly a vital relationship between the buildings on campus, the landscape that they inhabit and the planning principles by which the campus is organized. The design guidelines that follow are intended to be responsive to those factors without in any sense usurping them. Human comfort, facilities accommodation and sustainable efficiency are the immediate concerns of architecture. These are conditioned by climate, proximity and visibility. This document begins with an analysis of the principal non-residential buildings on the campus, and their relationship to one-another. Each building commentary is provided with an indication of which of the ten goals it demonstrates. From these have been deduced some basic goals for the architectural design guidelines before elaborating the guidelines themselves. At each stage, reference is made back to the established campus, to the architecture of specific buildings and to other campus features. Certain underlying topics of the guidelines are applicable in many different places, but these have been conceived wholly within the context of the existing campus at UC Davis. Human Comfort Facilities Accommodation 6 Sustainable Efficiency Goals & Objectives Goals & Objectives 7 A FIRM BASIS FOR DESIGN The basis for architectural design guidelines on the campus is in the qualities and character of its best existing buildings, and in aspirations towards qualities not yet satisfactorily realized. Goals and objectives are therefore derived in part from historical example, and in part from unrealized ambition. Vitruvius spoke of ‘firmness’ as a necessary attribute of good architecture. He recognized the importance of clarity in vision of what is to be achieved, but also acknowledged the pitfalls associated with formulaic composition. There must be room for innovation at UC Davis, yet there must be a firm basis that roots all campus architecture to this particular place. Definition of the place that is the campus at UC Davis is derived from: • Human scale, walking and other activity patterns; • Established architecture - its scale, materials, colors and diverse character; • Function (teaching, research and public service, and special equipment associated with each); • The relationship between established buildings and open spaces; • Climate, and the trees and other plants that flourish on the campus; • Campus boundaries and interface with adjacent neighborhoods; • The University’s long-range plan, which will influence future change in academics, in student life, and in the buildings that are to accommodate them. These are the basis of the goals that follow. A physical framework to support teaching, research, and public service mission of the campus. 8 Goals & Objectives GOALS AND OBJECTIVES DEFINED Goals express broad design intentions. Specific and attainable targets that contribute to realization of goals are the objectives, and are expressed in the design guidelines themselves. Between them, the goals and guidelines describe the universe of circumstances to be addressed by architectural design on the campus. The three goals with which the current Long Range Development Plan opens provide a good place to begin: LRDP Goal #1: Create a physical framework to support the teaching, research, and public service mission of the campus. LRDP Goal #2: Manage campus lands and resources in a spirit of stewardship for the future. LRDP Goal #3: Provide an environment to enrich campus life and serve the greater community. 9 GOALS FOR CAMPUS ARCHITECTURE Consistent with the three LRDP goals, and with the place-defining subjects listed before them, the following goals specifically address architecture appropriate to the campus: Goal 5: Respond to the climate, using to advantage light and shade, open and enclosed spaces, ventilation and landscape, in siting buildings and in detailing their architecture. Goal 1: Design buildings first and foremost for the people who will occupy them. Goal 6: Site and orient buildings in anticipation of continuing growth of the University. Anticipate future infill developments. Do not compromise those values for reasons of expediency, as use of the buildings will far outlive immediate difficulties. Goal 2: Respect the scale, quality and character of existing and valued buildings. Goal 3: Recognize that the ways in which buildings are used will change over time, and build them with the ability to accept change. Recognize that more support equipment is likely to be needed in many building types, and ensure that they are flexible enough to accommodate it internally. Goal 4: Unique and admired qualities of the campus depend to no small degree on the relationships between buildings, open spaces and landscape. Preserve and extend such relationships to include new buildings and other facilities. 10 Goal 7: Respect the architecture, uses and urban form of adjacent neighborhoods in the siting, massing and detailing of buildings near the campus boundaries. Goal 8: Ensure that buildings are conceived and designed in conformance with the intentions of the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Use campus resources with forethought and economy. The spirit of stewardship implies values of sustainability and flexibility in all new and remodeled buildings on campus. Goal 10: Select building materials and finishes that are durable, require little maintenance, and are appropriate to their surroundings. Goals & Objectives Respect the scale and setting of valued buildings on the campus. Match architecture to the climate and the landscape it supports. Human scale and activity is fundamental to good design. Anticipate that every building will have to adapt to changes. 11 12 Feature & Support Buildings Feature & Suppor t Buildings 13 FEATURE & SUPPORT BUILDINGS Not every building on the campus need be an architectural masterpiece, but all must contribute to a cohesive whole. Certain buildings, such as Mrak Hall and the Performing Arts Center, have a special landmark function by dint of prominent location and public-oriented purpose. Some, such as Hart Hall and the Silo, have achieved primary status because they 14 are particularly memorable to alumni and visitors. The design guidelines that follow are addressed to both primary and background buildings, and do not distinguish between them. They are about architectural collegiality, and accommodation of a fertile environment for learning and research. They are applicable to buildings throughout the campus. Primary Buildings on the Campus Primar y Buildings on the Campus 15 PRIMARY BUILDINGS ON THE CAMPUS Today, there are more than a thousand buildings on the University of California Davis campus, with a combined gross floor area in excess of 11 million square feet. Those parts of the campus where academic, administrative and social activities are most intensely concentrated are the places that give UC Davis its identity. These are also the places where new buildings will infill available sites, and where existing buildings will be remodeled, expanded or replaced. It is here that architectural sensitivities are greatest, and architectural guidelines will be of greatest value. QUAD STORER SILO TERCERO HEALTH SCIENCES SOUTH ENTRY 16 Traditionally recognized districts of the Central Campus Primary Buildings on the Campus While predicated on the character of the central campus, design guidelines are equally important in outlying locations. The context may be less sensitive away from the center, but in time, these areas will become mature and distinct districts of the campus. Consistency in design values from the outset can ensure compatibility between buildings and their setting without limiting diversity or innovation in architectural solutions. In this section, the characteristics of primary buildings, and significant groupings of buildings are examined in each of the traditionally recognized districts of the campus. The five districts, with the Campus Commons at their center, relate groups of buildings to an expanded circulation system. Beginning at the Quad, the historic center of permanent buildings, as opposed to agricultural structures, the descriptions move through the remainder of the Quad district, to the Storer Mall district, the Silo district, the South Entry District and the Health Sciences district. The Tercero district which separates Health Sciences from Silo and Storer is centrally located, but as yet includes no primary buildings, and so is not addressed here. In the following section, The Core Campus District, a functional subdivision of the central campus is examined. 17 CENTRAL CAMPUS - THE QUAD DISTRICT Shields Library As the intellectual heart of the campus, the library building sets important architectural precedents. Although it occupies the south side of the central Quad, the library is oriented away from it, with the entrance, its only active side, facing west towards Walker Hall. The original library, built in 1940 in a distinctive art deco style known as ‘WPA Moderne’, was a two story reinforced concrete structure with an exposed board form finish. Facing north towards the Quad, cast-in-place escutcheons decorated doorways, as tile work had adorned the doorways of earlier buildings on campus. Tall, curved windows above the main entrance served as a conspicuous landmark by day and by night. Shields Library was expanded three times before the western addition of 1990 almost doubled its size. At five stories, the western addition introduces a denser and more massive scale to the Quad. The materials too contrast with its neighbors, being precisely finished stone, concrete, metal and glass. The new elevations are deeply modeled, with concrete transoms, spandrels and glazing at successively greater setbacks from the full height pilasters at alternating gridlines. The entrance steps forward 18 The original library entrance terminated an organizing axis that ran north to Russell Boulevard, halving the Quad with an avenue of trees. from the façade in a full building height concrete box with an arched window overlain by a tripartite curved glazed screen; a reference, perhaps to the curved tall window at the entrance of the original building. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 1: The west entrance faces a plaza with seating that encourages people to use it as a rendezvous. Public spaces and an open courtyard within the library accommodate quiet contemplation. Goal 2: The 1990 addition departs significantly from the scale of the old library and its neighbors. Goal 3: The large volumes of the fourth library expansion anticipate the need for flexibility. Goal 4: The open courtyard within the library is a welcome addition. Spaces to the south and west contribute little. Goal 5: The architecture of the west facade allows a tempered response to strong, western sun. The open courtyard responds well to the local climate. Goal 6: Further growth of the Library will be challenging, after four expansions. Goal 7: The fourth expansion of the Library is remote from the campus edge-goal not applicable. Goal 8: Not applicable. This building preceded the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: The Library departs from established patterns of orientation. Goal 10: Durable materials have been used. The Shields Library expansion included a new main entrance that re-oriented the building to the west. 19 Walker Hall & Hart Hall Immediately west of the library is Walker Hall, built in 1927, and across Shields Avenue to the north is its contemporary, Hart Hall, completed the following year. These first permanent academic buildings sought to imprint a character in the campus that would identify it with established institutions of higher learning in California. With stucco walls, terra cotta roofs and glazed tiles around doorways, both buildings have a distinctive Spanish Mission flavor. Echoes of this architecture can be seen in the Hickey Gym (1938) and in the old central plant building south of Sproul Hall. In subsequent academic buildings, the overall scale and fenestration patterns survived, but the Spanish Mission signature did not. Built as a westward expansion of Hart, and forming a U-shaped courtyard with it is Robbins Hall (1958), a two-story reinforced concrete building of unremarkable architecture. Goal 1: Both buildings maintain a human scale, and Hart Hall attracts knots of people front and back. Goal 2: These buildings sought to establish a suitable scale, quality and character for the whole campus. Goal 3: Simple structure and configuration have enabled repeated adaptations. 20 Goal 4: These were among the earliest buildings and sought to establish a suitable campus landscape. Goal 5: The Mediterranean style of these buildings was matched to the climate here. Goal 6: They anticipated growth on the open acres around them. Goal 7: Remote from today’s campus boundary. Goal 8: Conformed to the original campus master plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: With the wisdom of hindsight, better materials choices could be made. The architects of Hart Hall hoped to establish a consistent style for campus buildings. Primary Buildings on the Campus The architecture of Walker Hall and Hart Hall established a sense of permanence and a friendly scale in campus buildings. 21 North Hall & South Hall Across the Quad from Hart Hall, and predating them by two decades, are two residential halls that adhered to the timber and shingle palette used by so many of the early agricultural buildings. North Hall (1908) and South Hall (1912) are among the oldest structures on campus. Their open, shady verandahs, and tree-shaded frontages set a pattern for student behavior and attachment to the central Quad that has done much to establish the particular ‘feel’ and sense of place possessed of the UC Davis campus. The presence of these two influential buildings on the east side of the Quad is strengthened by the modestly scaled Cross Cultural Center, and the much larger yet compatible Dutton Hall (1998). The consistent use of materials, domestic scale and detailing of this group of buildings make them as memorable as any on the campus; perhaps especially so because of their historical association through adherence to similar scale and materials with early agricultural buildings that once predominated at Davis. Goal 1: These are classic people-oriented buildings. Goal 2: North and South Halls establish a standard on campus for humanly scaled buildings of quality and character. Goal 3: As residential buildings, these are somewhat adaptable. 22 Goal 4: These halls are sited to share the open space of the central quad. Goal 5: Overhanging eaves and open porches respond well to the climate. Goal 6: These buildings are not intended to be expanded. Goal 7: These halls are similar in scale and character to contemporary neighborhood buildings. Goal 8: Consistent with the original campus master plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Commonly available materials were used, which today we regard as high maintenance. Among the most conspicuous buildings fronting the Quad, North and South Halls are also some of the earliest structures on campus. Although uncompromisingly modern in design, Dutton Hall respects the orientation, scale and materials of its smaller neighbors. Primary Buildings on the Campus Memorial Union In sharp contrast to the inactive façade of the Shields Library fronting the south side of the central Quad, the Memorial Union on the north side is extroverted and populous. At busy times of the day, throngs of students eating, studying and socializing eclipse the architecture. The glazed and shaded ground floor is both transparent and accessible, extending the space of the Quad directly into the buildings. The stylistic mix of architecture is less important than its accommodation of gregarious behavior among its users. The massing of the buildings steps up from one and two stories at the edge of the Quad to five stories at mid-block. The Bookstore and Freeborn extend activity through the block to North Quad, a campus drive that is an extension of downtown’s Third Street. Freeborn Hall and the north side of Memorial Union open onto the North Quad driveway. Goal 1: This building is designed around human activity and crowds of students. Goal 2: Scale, quality and character depart markedly from those of the Memorial Union’s older neighbors. Goal 3: This is a “loose fit” building that can accommodate change. Goal 4: The Union shares the open spaces and big shade trees of the quad to the south. To the north it shares a very different landscape with Freeborn Hall. Goal 5: Few concessions are made to the local climate. Goal 6: Some growth was anticipated. Goal 7: Unlike neighborhood architecture in scale, style and materials. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable materials were used. Memorial Union accommodates the indoor-outdoor lifestyle that the climate at UC Davis encourages. 23 Social Sciences and Humanities Across East Quad from the bookstore is a building that is a radical departure from the open and gregarious Memorial Union complex. The Social Sciences and Humanities buildings are isolated from their surroundings by largely blank and fortress-like walls. Where most buildings on campus have an intimate and integral relationship with the surrounding landscape, the enclosed courtyards of Social Sciences and Humanities are brutally stark, offering little relief from raw concrete. This is a set of buildings whose architecture, scale and materials deny the established values of the campus, and seek to isolate themselves from it. While great care has gone into the proportioning and detailing of the concrete and metal panel walls of these buildings, the architecture is entirely alien to the UC Davis campus, and to the adjacent city neighborhood across A Street. Goal 1: This building eschews places for people to congregate or relax. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of the architecture are entirely alien to the campus. Goal 3: Architectural forms are precise, finite and not amendable to change. Goal 4: Planted landscape is minimal. Open spaces are pristine but unwelcoming. Goal 5: The architecture responds to climate in that it strictly controls daylight. It generally isolates interior spaces from the outside world. 24 Goal 6: The complex is complete, finite and is not amendable to expansion. Goal 7: The architecture contrasts severely with the adjacent neighborhood. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: No recognition of values of stewardship are evident. Goal 10: Durable, low maintenance materials have been used. Blank concrete walls face the Bookstore across East Quad walk. An essentially introverted set of buildings, Social Sciences and Humanities ironically shun their surroundings, making no attempt to relate to them. Primary Buildings on the Campus Young Hall Between the Social Sciences and Humanities complex and the frameand-shingle enclave of North, South and Dutton halls is Young Hall (1940). This is one of the campus’ ‘background buildings’; its architecture unremarkable and its function in this location one of providing a neutral buffer between two widely contrasting architectures. Young Hall uses concrete, steel and glass in a style derivative of Bauhaus models in an unfussy manner that fits easily into the eclecticism of the campus. The proportions of the wall and window units are in scale with the older residence halls to the south, although quite different in form, materials and detailing. Goal 1: Generous, shady porches and large shaded windows make this a comfortable building for people to use. Goal 2: Young Hall predates the buildings it separates, yet its scale unites them well. Goal 3: Like many buildings of its era, this is not particularly adaptable to change. Goal 4: The landscape has matured around the building. Goal 5: Deep overhangs and open porches respond well to the climate. Goal 6: Young Hall did not anticipate growth. Goal 7: The scale of the building is compatible with neighborhood buildings across A Street. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: A suitable selection of 1940s materials. Sited between Memorial Union to the west and a residential neighborhood to the east, Young Hall differs from both architecturally, yet achieves a graceful transition. 25 Voorhies South of Young Hall and east of South Hall and the Cross Cultural Center is a later development of the architectural style manifest in Young Hall. Voorhies Hall (1959) is a three story academic office building with a massive curved circulation tower at its west end. Here are the first signs of the brutalist forms that were to dominate so much architecture at UC Davis as elsewhere during the following two decades. While it presents a rather bland and inactive east face to the neighborhood, other views of the building are fragmented by mature trees. These neutralize any tendency Voorhies might otherwise have to overwhelm its shingled neighbors. Goal 1: Voorhies Hall completely fills the available space, with little thought for campus life. While spaces within are adequate, they are not friendly. Goal 2: This building shows no regard for the scale, quality or character of its neighbors. Goal 3: Volumes within are large, and so to some degree flexible, but externally, there is no apparent anticipation of a need to change. Goal 4: Little or no regard is paid to open space or landscape. Goal 5: Deep set windows on the south elevation and perforated screens on the west strictly control sunlight. Goal 6: There is no anticipation of growth or infill. 26 Without the foil provided by numerous trees, the massive forms of Voorhies Hall would overwhelm its modest neighbors. The Cross Cultural Center was built as a residence. A comfortable neighbor to South Hall, it helps to mask the massive circulation tower of Voorhies Hall. Goal 7: No concession is made to neighborhood buildings across A Street. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used. Primary Buildings on the Campus Voorhies offers a prospect of blank concrete walls. 27 Olson Olson Hall, although occupying a corner that overlooks the central Quad, relates more closely to Sproul Hall and the Art and Music complex. Olson Hall (1963) is a substantial building, yet seems modest beside the massive library. The exterior of Olsen is made up of precast concrete panels and columns, with windows hidden behind precast concrete sun-screens (brises soleil). This is an introverted building that gives no glimpse of activity within. The architecture responds to its surroundings only in the scale and rhythm provided by its colonnades. The colonnades and roof overhangs create contrasting lit and shadowed surfaces under the strong sunlight, otherwise there is no articulation of the rectangular box. The service entrance faces unapologetically onto Hutchison Drive — now thankfully screened by a tree-lined avenue. The building is set so far back from both Hutchison Drive and from Shields Avenue that it has little presence on either. The building defines busy walkways to east and west, but has become a neutral presence from the streets. Goal 1: Many people walk by Olsen Hall because of its location on the campus, but it cannot be described as a hospitable building, except at the wide entrance at Shields Avenue. 28 The west facade of Olsen Hall defines a busy walkway east of the Library, but has little presence on the streets to the north and south. Goal 2: This is a stand-alone building that is unconcerned by the scale, quality or character of nearby buildings. Goal 3: As a finite, set piece ‘pavilion’ building, Olsen Hall is not amenable to change. Goal 4: Olsen is centered in a clear, paved space. Landscape is external and unrelated. Goal 5: Windows set back behind pilasters on the west elevation would control sunlight if the trees did not do so. Goal 6: Olsen Hall is not readily expandable. Goal 7: Architecture unrelated to the neighborhood that is not immediately adjacent. Goal 8: Preceded the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Olsen Hall is built with durable materials. Primary Buildings on the Campus Wickson Wellman and Wickson halls complete the community of buildings around the central Quad. Wickson Hall (1959) was one of a series of buildings undertaken in 1958 that included Hoagland, Voorhies, Robbins, and an addition to the Hickey Gym. Wickson is a three-story building that was designed to house the horticultural departments. The structure of the building is expressed in column-like concrete walls between framed and glazed panels on all three levels along the north elevation, which is viewed through a screen of shade trees. The building was remodeled and expanded in 1973. Immediately to the west of it is the enology building, a modest stucco building with shallowpitched tiled roofs and a signature tower. Behind it are Kerr Hall (1969), a slim six-story faculty office building with a red brick facing, and Wellman Hall, also faced in red brick. Goal 1: Wickson Hall makes few concessions to people’s needs outside the program. However, low walls and shade trees around the building attract frequent use. Goal 2: The blank walls facing east and west are out of scale with nearby buildings. Goal 3: The building was expanded in 1973. Goal 4: Shade trees planted close to the building soften its appearance. Goal 5: Shelves over windows shade them from high sun. The tower of the Enology building is a stylish and playful addition to the west end of Wickson Hall. Curiously, the north elevation of Wickson Hall is equipped with shade shelves over each window and shade trees close to the building. Goal 6: Wickson Hall was oriented to related to existing buildings, when buildable land was in plentiful supply. Goal 7: Not near the campus boundary. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable materials available in the 1950s were used. 29 Wellman Wellman Hall (1969) is located between Wickson and Hart halls, overlooking the west side of the Quad. Two tiers of verandahs face towards the Quad, but are scarcely evident as part of the Quad frontage because the red brick building is set so far back. On the west side of the building, it rises three stories from a sunken plaza, shared with Kerr Hall, Robbins Hall and its annex. The prevailing impression of the architecture of Wellman Hall is of two deep and shady verandahs, and of red brick walls. Goal 1: The verandahs facing east onto the main quad are usually thronged with students. A place to see and be seen. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of Wellman Hall differ markedly from its older neighbors to the south, but fit with the Memorial Union’s grander scale to the east. Goal 3: This is not a readily expandable building, but its generous floor-to-floor heights accommodate interior change and system upgrades. Goal 4: Although set well back from it, Wellman Hall is oriented towards the great open space of the main quad. The west elevation overlooks a more moderately scaled and carefully modeled open space. Goal 5: The wide overheads and deep verandahs provide shade and admit breezes. The interior of the building benefits marginally from these with its high ceilings. Goal 6: The building site is constrained, and the square footprint makes expansion difficult if rooms are to be daylit. 30 Open verandas offer welcome relief to the warren of classrooms within Wellman Hall. The west side of Wellman Hall overlooks a quiet, sunken plaza. Goal 7: Not applicable. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Materials are durable and have become appropriate to their surroundings with subsequent construction nearby. Primary Buildings on the Campus Hickey Gymnasium Located north of North Quad adjacent to Toomey and A Street fields, Hickey Gymnasium was built in two phases. Phase one, completed in 1938, was of board-formed, exposed cast-in-place concrete in a ‘Moderne’ architectural style. The main roof is flat with parapets, but secondary pitched roofs of red clay tile, reminiscent of Walker and Hart halls distinguish the entrances. An addition was built on the east side of the swimming pool in 1963 in a similar style. Large blank walls facing south towards North Quad are now clothed by Boston Ivy, which softens the appearance of such a large unbroken surface. Goal 1: Like most gymnasiums, Hickey is a large volume with few windows and little space for socializing outside. It accommodates activities within, but not outside. Goal 2: Hickey Gymnasium followed the stylistic example of Walker and Hart Halls, but predates most other buildings nearby. Goal 3: A large volume space is more adaptable than most to change. Smaller auxiliary spaces are less so. Goal 4: Perception of the massiveness of the structure is reduced by varied perimeter plantings, and especially by the ivy that clothes the south elevation. Goal 5: No particular response to climate is evident except the Mediterranean tile roofs. Goal 6: This was a pioneer building on a large open space. Goal 7: Distant from campus boundaries. The mass of Hickey Gymnasium is tempered by its setback from North Quad and by the trees and vines that clothe it. The 1963 addition to the gymnasium faces west onto the North Gate Entry. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: The original building used standard contemporary materials; the 1963 extension is of reinforced concrete. 31 Hunt East of Hickey Gym and Howard Way is Hunt Hall (1949). This two-story academic building houses Agronomy and Range Sciences, and includes a 200-seat auditorium. The exterior architecture has the clean simplicity reminiscent of post-war Scandinavian buildings, with continuous masonry walls and regularly spaced and shallowly inset metal windows. A full height window wall, rising from floor to eaves projection, signals the main entrance. The architecture of Hunt Hall is notable because of its departure from heavy concrete walls and balconies with continuous or ganged windows. Goal 1: Hunt Hall is a utilitarian building that makes no concessions to socializing students or faculty. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of the building are dictated more by the taste of the era in which it was designed than the architecture of other campus buildings. Goal 3: Some expandability. Goal 4: Relationships to landscape and open space are unremarkable. Goal 5: Minimal response to climate. Goal 6: No anticipation of continued growth is evident. Goal 7: Distant from the local neighborhood. Goal 8: Preceded the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable materials were used. 32 Hunt Hall responds minimally to the Californian climate with flush windows. The long, unbroken eaves line is out of character with most of the other campus buildings. Primary Buildings on the Campus Veihmeyer East of Hunt Hall, and across the street (North Quad) from Wickson Hall, is Veihmeyer Hall (1949). Like its neighbor to the east, Veihmeyer is a two-story masonry building with projecting eaves and regularly spaced pierced window openings. At the southwest corner, a loggia-like portico protects the main building entrance. Goal 1: The generous entrance loggia offers a shady and cool place for people to congregate. Goal 2: More attuned to established campus architecture than neighboring Hunt Hall or later Wickson Hall. Goal 3: Reasonably flexible. Goal 4: The building addresses its site at the corner of two landscaped streets with some care, observing established setbacks. Goal 5: The deep eaves and open entrance loggia respond to the sunny climate. Goal 6: Veihmeyer made economical use of its site, anticipating growth. Goal 7: Distant from nearby neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable materials were used. Veihmeyer Hall has a south elevation more deeply modeled than its neighbor to the east. A shady porch creates a place to socialize at the main entrance. 33 Plant and Environmental Science Facility Immediately north of Veihmeyer, and visible between it and Hunt Hall is the new Plant and Environmental Science Center (2002). This building develops the aesthetic of continuous masonry walls, pierced windows and overhanging eaves to suit a larger and technically more complex building than its neighbor. The windows are set more deeply than in neighboring buildings to protect the glass from solar gain. Also, ground floor windows in this three-story building are enlarged to improve natural lighting and visual access. Full height porticos with projecting eaves for shade protect entrances and provide places to linger and talk. The exterior walls are pre-cast concrete panels that distinguish 34 window reveals by color and by raising them slightly from the wall plane. A tiling pattern is also expressed, reducing the apparent mass of the wall surfaces to a scale consistent with the architecture and the buildings occupants. Goal 1: Sheltered gathering places are provided at each entrance. Goal 2: Materials differ from neighboring buildings, but architectural scale and quality are compatible. Goal 3: The building design anticipates the need to replace some building systems in the future. Goal 4: Open spaces and plantings have been designed to complement the building and its neighbor, Veihmeyer Hall. Goal 5: Deep set windows and shaded porticos respond to the sunny climate. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 6: This is an infill building that leaves little room for expansion. Goal 7: Distant from campus boundaries. Goal 8: Consistent with the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Sustainable design and energyefficient systems were employed. Large trees were saved and the building infills a remnant site. Goal 10: Building materials were selected for their durability and low maintenance. Configured for community, the Plant and Environmental Sciences building is formed around an open courtyard, with large windows establishing a connection to activities within the building. 35 CENTRAL CAMPUS - THE STORER MALL DISTRICT STORER TERCERO QUAD SILO SOUTH ENTRY 36 Primary Buildings on the Campus Cruess Hall East of the new Plant and Environmental Science Center, across California Avenue, is Cruess Hall (1952). This two-story building for the Department of Food Science and Technology is built of concrete and glass, and has precast concrete coffers around its window openings for solar control. This mask has the effect of imposing an artificial and massive scale on the building. The architecture of the building beneath the mask is revealed at the main entrance, where a crisp geometry of square windows that light a double height entry hall wrap the northeast corner of the building adjacent to the entrance. This building has a suburban quality to it, the architecture belonging more comfortably in a business park than on a campus thronged with students. With the exception of the entrance corner, Cruess is not an inviting building. A more sensitive solution to solar control could make it so. Goal 1: The open space on the south side of Cruess Hall provides a quiet outdoor retreat, but otherwise the building does not accommodate social gathering. Goal 2: The scale and character of Cruess Hall are out of step with the campus, recalling a suburban business park. Goal 3: A moderately flexible building. Goal 4: The building is isolated from California Avenue by dense shrubberies. These serve to hide the building, not to benefit its occupants. Except at the northeast corner entrance, Cruess Hall is removed from congress with campus life by a dense landscape and by an architectural treatment that masks all activity within. Goal 5: The architecture is effective in eliminating strong sun, but takes no advantage of other aspects of the climate. Goal 6: Future growth and infill were evidently not priorities when Cruess Hall was designed. Goal 7: This is an introverted architecture, unconcerned by the appearance of its neighbor. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Currently available durable materials were used. 37 Hoagland South of Cruess Hall is a wide landscaped space, and beyond it is Hoagland Hall (1959), occupied by classrooms, laboratories and offices of the Departments of Land, Air and Water Resources. This two-story building presents a different architecture in different directions, which makes sense in terms of solar gain and views. Massive, continuous concrete walls with deeply recessed strip windows dominate the north elevation. Secondary elevations have curtain walls between massive castin-place concrete cross walls. Views onto the broad, wooded walk to the north are obliterated by solid masonry balcony walls, which, from the walkway, obscure all signs of life within the building. The south side of Hoagland is the place where people choose to linger, because of the more accommodating scale of the architecture and open spaces, and because of the shade provided by mature trees. Goal 1: From the north and west, Hoagland Hall appears as an unoccupied bunker. The south side is more open, and shows human activity. Goal 2: No regard is given to earlier precedents for architectural scale, quality or character. Goal 3: As is evident from equipment added to the exterior of the building, it was not built with the ability to accept changes over time. 38 Heavy balconies overlook the wooded walk to the north of Hoagland Hall. An inflexible architecture results in unsightly equipment additions on the exterior. Goal 4: Potential relationships to the broad wooded walk to the north have been denied by massive, impersonal walls. Goal 5: Hoagland Hall appears to be oriented back-to-front where solar control is concerned. Goal 6: No evident anticipation of continuing growth. Goal 7: Hoagland Hall is remote from campus edges. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Reasonably durable materials were used. Primary Buildings on the Campus Asmundson Hall Southeast of Hoagland, fronting California Avenue, is two-story Asmundson Hall (1954), a research and teaching facility. This building has double height pilasters expressing the structural grid, with the spaces between them filled by large, nine-pane windows and concrete spandrel panels. Eaves project in the manner of Hunt and Veihmeyer halls, which preceded Asmundson Hall by five years. Goal 1: Asmundson Hall is set back and somewhat isolated from California Avenue and other places frequented by people. There is no encouragement of congregation or informal meeting. Goal 2: The building is consistent with its near contemporaries but not with older valued precedents. Goal 3: There is no evident anticipation of change. Goal 4: Adjacent open spaces are used to isolate Asmundson Hall rather than engage it in campus life. Goal 5: Apart from overhanging eaves, there is little response in the architecture to climate. Goal 6: No anticipation of continued growth apparent in the siting or configuration of the building. Goal 7: Remote from campus boundaries. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Reasonably durable materials were used. Asmundson Hall is set back from California Avenue to allow the distinctive avenue of trees room to develop full canopies. 39 Hutchison, Storer, Mann, & Kleiber Forming a group with Hoagland and Amundson halls are Hutchison, Storer and Kleiber halls and to the west of them, the Mann Laboratory, Briggs Hall and the new Life Sciences building. Hutchison (1963) is a five-story classroom, laboratory, office and support building for the departments of Nematology, Microbiology, Plant Pathology, CEPRAP and Advanced Instrumentation. Each floor has a balcony projecting out from the south façade, providing solar protection to the story below. A deep overhang at the eaves protects the top-story windows. Storer Hall (1968) houses the departments of Evolution and Ecology, and the Center for Population Biology. At six stories, it is among the taller structures on campus. Elevations express a concrete frame structure, in-filled with precast concrete panels and metal-framed windows. Above each window is a horizontal light shelf that bounces daylight onto the ceilings inside. The shelves shade the windows effectively without adding massive scale to the building, as the Cruess Hall solution does. The south entrance to Storer Hall is marked by a great oak tree, creating a popular shady place for students to study and socialize. Kleiber Hall (1971) is a small, single-story lecture hall with massive concrete walls that are largely imperforate except for the recessed window wall at the entrance. The Mann Laboratory (1965) is also single story building of unremarkable architecture. 40 Klieber Hall Drive gives access to the north side of Klieber, Storer, and Hutchison halls. Goal 1: The south entrance to Storer Hall is made popular by its large, well placed tree - the only sociable place to be found among these four buildings. Goal 2: None of these buildings follows the example of the older and more valued buildings on campus, but they do fit with the post-WWII buildings to the north. Goal 3: Ability to accept change not investigated. Goal 4: Relationships between those buildings, open space and landscape are minimal. Goal 5: All use deep eaves for sun protection. Storer also uses light-reflecting shelves to project filtered sunlight deep into the rooms to give superior daylighting. Goal 6: Neither siting nor orientation of the four buildings suggest anticipation of growth. Goal 7: These buildings are distant from campus boundaries. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable materials were used. Primary Buildings on the Campus Light shelves on Storer Hall The south entrance to Storer Hall is made accommodating by a huge, shady tree. The tree provides outdoor comfort that the building addresses only with a minimal porch. Klieber Hall, with a style and scale of its own, forms a transition between Storer Hall and Briggs Hall. The south entry to Hutchison Hall is less welcoming than its neighbor, mainly because paving prevents shade tree planting. Balconies on the south elevation of Hutchison Hall shade the windows below. Trees partially screen the service yard for Haring Hall to the south. The Mann Laboratory 41 Briggs and Life Sciences The sub-group of science buildings forming the western extremity of the central campus relates to its immediate neighbors to the east, Kleiber and Haring halls. Briggs Hall (1971) was expanded in 1997, and houses teaching facilities and research laboratories for the departments of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Neurobiology, Physiology & Behavior, Entomology, and the Biotechnology Programs Office. Briggs is a large, three-story building, configured as a number of connecting wings. The building is predominantly of cast-in-place concrete with massive circulation towers, and deeply modeled concrete window units ranged in three tiers along each façade between the towers. The strong Californian sunlight casts deep shadows in and under the window units, creating a crisply articulated effect. The architecture of Briggs is most closely affiliated to that of the science buildings in the Silo district. The Life Sciences forms a courtyard against the southwest wing of Briggs Hall. 42 new Life Sciences building (2000) forms an open courtyard with the southwest wings of Briggs Hall, with its own entry from the southwest. Flat masonry walls rise four stories inside the courtyard. They are perforated by raised, precast window openings with recessed glazing, and subdivided by deep mullions and transoms to reduce solar gain. The wall surface is reduced in scale using a tiling pattern. Color distinguishes the window units from the wall surface. Laboratory chimney stacks are grouped and screened by pitched roof elements reminiscent of the roof-forms and colors of Hart and Walker halls. Briggs Hall is distinguished by the rhythm and contrast of deeply shaded windows and strongly modeled concrete. It has an assertive architecture redolent of its era. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 1: Briggs Hall acknowledges social needs at its monumental entrances, but is otherwise introverted. The Life Sciences building wraps around a courtyard to the south and west to create an outdoor place for both instruction and social gatherings. Goal 2: In 1971, Briggs Hall brought an entirely new architectural aesthetic to the campus, thereby setting a different context for academic buildings at the western extremity of the core campus. The 1997 expansion and the adjoining Life Sciences building have respected this context, while tempering the architectural character to respond to values reflected in these design guidelines. A red pitched roof reminiscent of Walker and Hart Halls hides mechanical equipment on the roof. Goal 3: The more recent buildings have been designed with sufficient space to accommodate supplements to, and eventual replacement of mechanical and electrical systems. Goal 4: The landscaped open space between the buildings extends their activities out of doors, while bringing the lush landscape of the campus into their midst. Goal 5: Fenestration is carefully protected in both buildings against solar gain, while engaging natural lighting. Goal 6: On plan, the buildings appear as a series of connected beads, with room for additional connected buildings to the north and west. Goal 7: The original Briggs Hall departed radically from architectural precedent. Subsequent buildings attached to it have followed this recent precedent, but have tempered what was an extreme departure to humanize the outdoor environmental appearance of the buildings. Goal 8: Predates the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: The Life Sciences building is sited to use developable land sparingly, and the building is designed to be energy efficient, relatively low in maintenance costs. Goal 10: Both buildings use durable, low-maintenance materials and finishes. Pitched red roof forms screen laboratory flues, echoing the architecture of Hart and Walker halls. 43 Haring Hall Completing the central campus group of primary buildings in the Storer district, Haring Hall (1949) is perhaps the most visible because of its proximity to the Silo, and to the intersection of California Avenue and Hutchison Drive. This expansive two-story building has been the home of Veterinary Medicine since it was built. Its architecture respects nearby Robbins and Walker halls in scale, but adds its own civic aesthetic with the formal architecture of its entrances. The bas-relief panels over the main entrance are indelibly linked to memories of the campus for many visitors and alumni. Concrete pilasters subdivide the elevations into bays that are filled with windows and masonry panels. Eaves project to shade the walls from mid-day sun. Goal 1: For many years Haring Hall was both closest to the social center of the campus, yet the westernmost outpost of the central campus. It has generous entrance halls, but most socializing moves across Hutchison Drive to the Silo. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of Haring Hall are closely related to those of Robins and Walker halls, yet a singular character is expressed at the main eastern entrance. Goal 3: Haring Hall has accepted many changes since its completion in 1949. Goal 4: Oriented to terminate Shields Avenue with its main east entrance, Haring 44 Hall left a triangle of open space to the south which has evolved into a landscape buffer between this academic building and the bustle of Hutchison Drive and the Silo to the south. Goal 5: Little response to climate is evident. Goal 6: Infill potential remains in completing the quadrangle to the north, and expansion to the west. Goal 7: Haring Hall is visible from the neighborhood to the east only down the length of Shields Avenue, which it terminates admirably. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Building materials are reasonably durable. The bas-relief panels over the east entrance to Haring Hall are conspicuous as a landmark at the intersection of California Avenue and Hutchison Drive. Primary Buildings on the Campus CENTRAL CAMPUS - THE SILO DISTRICT QUAD STORER SILO TERCERO HEALTH SCIENCES SOUTH ENTRY 45 The Silo Many ascribe iconic significance to the Silo, as it symbolizes the agricultural roots of the University, and evokes fond memories among alumni. It was among the first structures completed on what was then, in 1908, the University Farm. First used as a dining hall, then as a dairy barn, it was converted back to student use in 1965. In 1992, additions and interior renovations provided space for a fast food court, the Silo Pub restaurant, and a branch of the UCD Bookstore. The Silo is now the focus of a development of single story wood shingle buildings around an open courtyard. The scale and materials of the buildings signify informality and contrast with the more serious aspect of nearby academic buildings. Westward expansion of the 46 Silo complex to replace Surge Building IV is planned as the population of the campus continues to grow. Goal 1: Of all the buildings on the campus, those of the Silo District are most consistently attuned to the needs of the people who use them. This is due mostly to their function and design, but also to their predominately domestic scale and wood frame architecture. Goal 2: All take their cue from the scale, quality and character of the Silo itself: one of the oldest and most loved structures on campus. Goal 3: The Silo complex has demonstrated its adaptability through a series of different uses over the past century. Wood frame structures enclosing large volumes have been very adaptable, though more costly to maintain in recent years. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 4: The Silo buildings are centered on their own active open space, and share longer views into the Sciences Quad to the southeast. Goal 5: The high, open ceilings, broad eaves and openable windows of the older Silo buildings provide shade and natural ventilation making a crowded building comfortable at all times. Goal 6: Recent additions to the Silo group anticipate westward growth of the complex to replace the temporary Surge building and enclose the service yard. Goal 7: Adherence to wood frame and shingle architecture of the campus’ oldest buildings is a conscious exception to other precedents and in keeping with the Architects and Engineers building to the west. It is remote from Davis residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Precedes the current Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: A conscious exception has been made from this goal for the Silo group in order to retain an important historical reference to the beginnings of the University. Wood shingles predominate in the Silo complex recalling the agricultural roots of the University, and contrasting with masonry buildings to the north, south and east. 47 Architects & Engineers Building Related to the Silo group by proximity and its agricultural origins is the wooden barn that now houses the campus architects and engineers. As the Silo group is expanded westward, displacing temporary buildings, the contribution of this currently isolated building to the campus will become more evident. It will also be a prominent feature of the east-west walkway that will connect north Tercero to the Chemistry buildings. 2001 renovations have updated the interior of the barn while preserving its historic features. Goal 1: Conversion of this barn to an office building has maintained an intimate scale in the spaces and architectural detailing that makes it a welcoming place to visit. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character are consistent with the best of the Silo group. Goal 3: This former barn has undergone several changes over the years and has bourn them well. Goal 4: Located at a transition point between the Engineering buildings and the Silo group, this building is oriented both north and south, its landscape reflecting this. However, a protected space by the north entrance signals the proper approach and entry. Goal 5: Deep eaves, a shallow pitched roof and sheltered windows suit this building to the climate. Goal 6: This building predates all its neighbors. 48 Goal 7: Distant from the campus boundaries. Goal 8: The Long Range Development Plan accommodates this building and the walkway that passes it. Goal 9: Stewardship and economy are evident in the case with which this building has been maintained and updated to fit current space needs. Goal 10: An exception is made to this goal on order to preserve the historical integrity of this early campus building. This carefully restored barn building is an apt reminder of the roots of the university. Primary Buildings on the Campus Hog Barn Valued as a contemporary of other early timber buildings in the core campus, the Hog Barn (1914) is now somewhat isolated from the Silo group by Bainer Hall and the Crocker Nuclear Lab. This two-story ‘stick and shingle’ western barn was central to a complex of animal pens and lesser barn buildings, but now stands in splendid isolation amid the concrete architecture of the Engineering buildings. Goal 1: This barn was designed first and foremost for the hogs that occupied it. However, the wood frame and shingle construction, and the domestic scale of the main building make it a natural member of the gregarious silo group, from which it is now isolated. Goal 2: The Hog Barn predates all of its neighbors, but was certainly consistent with its contemporaries. Goal 3: The simple wood frame construction of this building has made it adaptable to many changes over its long life. Goal 4: The most significant open spaces associated with the barn are the abandoned hog pens and loading chute. These look like a site awaiting something new. Goal 5: No particular response to climate is evident, except in the shade afforded to the hogs by the wide-eaved neighboring structure. Goal 6: The Hog Barn precedes all neighboring structures. Goal 7: Distant from the campus boundary. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Historic consistency excepts this building from Goal 10. The Hog Barn is now largely hidden behind Academic Surge and the Crocker Nuclear Lab. Roessler Hall is the odd-man-out among the science buildings. 49 Bainer Hall East Immediately south of the Silo complex is Bainer Hall, the administrative center of the College of Engineering. The east wing of this Janus-like building belongs to a group around mounded lawns and oval walkways with chemistry, physics and geology buildings, with the rather awkward inclusion of Roessler Hall. With the exception of Roessler, these buildings create an ordered campuswithin-a-campus of buildings that are compatible with one-another in scale and architecture, united by a carefully modeled landscape. Separated by trees and a parking lot from Mrak Hall, the only direct visual link is to the Silo complex, and north along the alignment of California Avenue, which continues into the sciences group as a walkway. The modeled landscape helps to create a campus-within-a-campus like atmosphere with the surrounding science buildings. This contemplative space is on the south side of Bainer Hall East. 50 Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 1: The north and east frontages of Bainer Hall East open onto the mounded lawns, pathways and shade trees of the sciences open space, making it a popular resort. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of the architecture is consistent with that of the Chemistry and Physics buildings visible across the open space. Goal 3: Large volumes in this building are amenable to change. Goal 4: The relationship to the sciences open space referenced above is key to the character of Bainer East. More intimate, shaded landscape to the south provides a tranquil outlook. Goal 5: Deepset windows provide effective solar protection. Goal 6: Together with Bainer West wings, the complex is as large as its site will allow. There is little possibility of infill or expansion. Goal 7: Bainer East fits in well with other buildings around the sciences open space. All are remote from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used. A carefully modeled landscape unites the Physics and Chemistry buildings. Bicycles dominate the space outside the Physics and Geology building. 51 Bainer Hall West The west wings of Bainer Hall form a very different relationship with its immediate neighbors, Engineering II and III, and the cluster of temporary buildings around the Campus Data Center. The buildings are closely grouped, and the space between them is little more than vehicular access and loading space, although the space between Bainer and Engineering II has the appearance of a street, with sidewalk and street trees. The apparently blind walls on either side of this street, however, make it an unsympathetic environment for pedestrians, so its value as part of the walkway system must be questioned. The impression made by this group of buildings is more industrial than campus, fitting, perhaps to the scale and nature of the engineering functions accommodated. The west wings of Bainer enclose a service yard, with a loading dock along the south edge fronting Bainer Hall Drive. Goal 1: Bainer West presents blank walls to those passing by: windows are high up. The character is industrial, with no concession to people beyond the strictly utilitarian functions of the building. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of valued buildings on campus are completely ignored. Goal 3: High-bay industrial spaces in Bainer West are evidently designed with changing needs in mind. 52 Goal 4: Streetscape between Bainer and Engineering II has been carefully designed, but there is no other concession to open space or landscape. Goal 5: Clerestory windows are protected from glare by a deep overhang on the south elevation. Goal 6: Together with Bainer East wing, the complex is as large as its site will allow. There is little possibility of infill or expansion. Goal 7: Bainer West is remote from the campus boundaries. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used. Bainer Hall’s southeast wing has an industrial appearance, making Bainer Hall Drive unappealing as a walkway. The northwest corner of Engineering III introduces some human elements to Bainer Hall Drive. Primary Buildings on the Campus Academic Surge An architectural anomaly on the campus, Academic Surge occupies a visually isolated spot between Engineering III, Facilities Services, a parking lot and some temporary buildings. This is a building that is unresponsive to considerations of climate, orientation, scale or campus character. This two-story tilt-up concrete building was completed in 1992. The west façade is clad in tinted glass in multiple bands that belie the scale of the building, create glare, and challenge energy-efficient building operation. Goal 1: Despite its extensive glazing, Academic Surge is an introverted building. The heroically scaled porch is too high to provide shade to anyone using it, and there is a lack of places to sit, so people are not accommodated beyond the functions of the building interior. Goal 2: The scale, quality and character of this building are entirely alien to those of respected buildings on campus. Goal 3: Academic Surge should have all of the flexibility afforded by a speculative office building, which it resembles in layout and structure. Goal 4: Academic Surge appears to ignore its surroundings. Goal 5: In many respects, this building is poorly suited to the climate, exposing large areas of glass to solar gain, for example. Goal 6: The dimensions of the plan suggest that expansion of this building would be difficult without depriving program space of daylight. Academic Surge is an architectural anomaly on the campus. Goal 7: Academic Surge is remote from the campus boundaries. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: The spirit of stewardship is noticeably absent. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used, although maintenance needs are relatively high. 53 Deep-set windows, especially at ground level, protect the interior from summer sun on the south elevation. Meyer Hall Completed in 1987, Meyer Hall is actually a pair of buildings separated by a covered courtyard with a retractable roof. The courtyard is in the form of a shady passage with sky-bridges linking each of the three stories above. Externally, the architecture is of massive concrete walls perforated on the north and south sides by deeply recessed 54 windows. At ground level on the south façade, window openings are enlarged and extended to the ground, giving the building the appearance of a colonnade. The overall mass of the building is reduced by dividing it into four staggered sections, the two end sections stepping in by a full structural bay at the third and fourth floor levels. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 1: The space between the linked buildings of Meyer Hall are designed to protect people from the environment, providing them with a neutral place that is neither inside nor outside the building. This accommodates both work and social gatherings. Goal 2: The scale and character of Meyer Hall is distinct from that of older, respected buildings on campus. At the southwest corner of the physical sciences and engineering group, there were no immediate precedents to follow, so it established its own aesthetic. Goal 3: The building is constructed as eight connected four story blocks, so flexibility is limited to changes within each. Goal 4: Unlike many buildings on campus, Meyer Hall is conceived as a form set on a lawn with specimen trees dotted across it. The relationship to open space is quite different from most others. Goal 5: There are three notable responses to climate: the shaded court between the building halves, the deepset and shaded windows, and the thermal mass of the heavy precast concrete skin of the building. Goal 6: The linear form of the building lends itself to expansion, or continuation in separated structures along the central eastwest axis. Goal 7: Although at the edge of the central campus, Meyer Hall is remote from the nearest residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used. Filtered daylight fills the mall that separates the two buildings of Meyer Hall. 55 Mrak Hall Occupying a commanding position at the formal entrance to the campus from the south, and on axis with a discontinuous pathway that reaches across the campus from South Entry to Hunt Hall in the north, Mrak Hall holds a pivotal position. The architecture is appropriately formal, and at five stories, it is among the tallest buildings on campus. The siting and function of Mrak Hall as the principal administrative building on campus make it a singular building, allowing an architecture that is distinctive and in no sense a precedent for others. Deeply overhanging eaves and recessed top and ground floors acknowledge the need for shade, but the three intermediate stories have no architectural protection for the windows. Trees flank the building to east and west, isolating it from other buildings, and partly veiling it from views across Lake Spafford. Views from the building are largely filled with trees, hiding the strong axial relationships across the campus to the north. Views to the south are unobstructed as far as the elevated freeway, with the Center for the Arts and the Buehler Alumni and Visitor Center in the foreground. The only other campus building that is near Mrak Hall is the architecturally dissimilar King Hall to the southwest, though this too is shrouded by mature trees. 56 Goal 1: People can be found conversing in the cool lobby of Mrak Hall, and on the shady north side of the building. Although the most formal building on campus, it is clearly people-oriented. Goal 2: Mrak Hall is a conscious departure from traditional architecture of this campus, occupying a strategic location at the entrance to the central campus, and commanding the main north-south campus axis. Its height and materials assert the authority of this building. Goal 3: This is essentially an office building, with limited capacity for change. Mrak Hall presides over the formal entry to the campus from the south. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 4: The principal relationship of Mrak Hall to the landscape and spaces around it is through the axis on which it stands. Mature trees engage it laterally with open lawns and the arboretum. Goal 5: The loggias at the ground floor and the top floor, the extended eaves, and the deep-set vertically pierced windows all respond to the climate. Goal 6: This is a finite, stand alone building with no expectation of growth. Goal 7: Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable, high quality building materials have been used. From the north, Mrak Hall terminates a formal walkway from Walker and the Library at Hutchinson Drive. 57 King Hall The Law School is housed in King Hall, completed in 1968, just three years after the School was founded. It was dedicated to the memory of Martin Luther King. The concrete frame of this two-story building is clearly expressed on the exterior, its brick infill panels set back behind the structural frame on the exposed façades to shade the windows from solar gain. Perforated panels of precast concrete lighten the appearance of the second floor balconies, and allow a suffused light to reflect from balcony floors. One of the most appealing views of this building is from Putah Creek east of the Mrak Hall Drive bridge. Goal 1: The main entrance to the King law building is on the shady north side, where trees soften the landscape. Goal 2: Being remote from the older respected buildings on campus, King Hall was unrestrained in scale, quality and character except for its proximity to Mrak Hall and Putah Creek. Goal 3: Change is limited to adaptations within the concrete envelope of the building. Goal 4: King Hall relates directly to three very different kinds of open space: extensive open lawns to the north, the formal entry drive to the university to the east, and Putah Creek and an extension of the arboretum to the south. Goal 5: The entire building is recessed behind a two-story concrete logia which shades walls and windows while admitting filtered light and breezes. 58 King Hall is designed to control solar access, but admit a suffused daylight. In a location that associates it only loosely to other buildings, King Hall’s most appealing view is from Putah Creek. Goal 6: This is a finite, stand alone building that would be difficult to expand. Goal 7: The building purposely distinguishes itself from both neighborhood and campus architecture nearby. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Durable building materials have been used. Primary Buildings on the Campus Everson Hall East of Chemistry and opening onto both Hutchison Drive and Mrak Walk is Everson Hall, completed in 1970. This two-story concrete and glass building is an unremarkable background building, in part because of its architecture, but mostly because it is set back so far on both of its frontages and is somewhat lost among the trees. Goal 1: While the building does little to accommodate people, the land between it an Mrak Walk makes up for it. Goal 2: The blank walls and variable scales of this building are offset by its inconspicuous location among mature trees. Goal 3: Too much scarce developable land is occupied by this single story building, so rather than radical remodeling, eventual replacement with one or more taller buildings would probably be wise. Everson Hall occupies a secluded spot on the west side of Mrak Walk. Goal 4: Everson Hall is hidden behind the Chemistry Building, a deep setback from Hutchison Drive, and a similarly deep setback from Mrak Walk. The landscape dominates the architecture. Goal 5: Some windows are deep-set, otherwise, little concession to the climate is evident. Goal 6: It would be difficult to expand this sprawling building. Redevelopment to a higher density might be wiser. Goal 7: Not visible from residential neighborhoods Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Reasonably durable building materials have been used. 59 Art, Music & Wright Hall Across Mrak Walk from Everson is the Fine Arts group. All three buildings are related to one-another by a central open space on the south side of Hutchison Drive. Although they back onto the Arboretum, they are unrelated to it, having only service access on the south side. Art is the most prominent of the trio on Hutchison Drive. It is a threestory concrete frame building with large windows on its north façade, yet its scale seems modest by comparison with the Shields Library across the street. Wright Hall is distinguished by its colors and the colonnade that connects it to Music. From the Arboretum looking north across Lake Spafford, the red cornice and blue-gray walls of the fly-tower make Wright Hall something of a landmark. To the east of Wright is Music, a modest and undistinguished building that fits comfortably with its neighbors, including the old central plant building to the east. This row forms a comfortable street edge, and is complemented by the size and form of the street trees on Hutchison Drive, making a handsome entry to the campus from the east, despite the bohemian presence of the old metal sculpture studio. Goal 1: Between Art and Music, and north of Wright Hall is a small plaza of a scale and design that makes it a popular place for small groups to congregate. 60 Goal 2: The old central plant building sur- vives from the 1920s attempt to establish a consistent architectural style for the campus. To some extent there is a consistency in scale between the buildings of this group, although the architecture and character varies widely. Goal 3: While the north elevations of these buildings onto Hutchison Drive have little room to change, the south sides are screened by big trees in the arboretum, and accessed only by service drives, so change continues to occur there. Goal 4: Though close to the arboretum, there is no formal connection to it by any of these buildings. However, each contributes to the friendly environment provided by the east end of Hutchison Drive. Goal 5: Each is so well protected from the sun by tall trees to the south and west, that little architectural response was necessary to the climate, especially in the case of Wright Hall, where little light is admitted to the building in any case. Goal 6: Art has room to grow west, towards Mrak Walk (or a separate building could be developed there), while Wright and Music can grow to the south. Goal 7: The east end of Hutchison Drive extends into the adjoining residential neighborhood, and the residential scale there is carried into the campus by the scale of the street, its trees, and buildings along its south edge. Goal 8: All predate the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Reasonably durable building materials have been used. Primary Buildings on the Campus From the Arboretum looking north across Lake Spafford, the red cornice and blue-gray walls of the fly-tower make Wright Hall something of a landmark. The old central plant building survives as a little-altered example of the 1920s campus Spanish Mission style. 61 CENTRAL CAMPUS - THE SOUTH ENTRY DISTRICT QUAD STORER SILO TERCERO SOUTH ENTRY 62 Primary Buildings on the Campus Wyatt Pavilion & University Club Conference Center Constructed in 1907 as livestock judging pavilion and all purpose meeting hall, Wyatt Pavilion is the oldest building on the campus, and one of the smallest. This intimate building was relocated in 1964 to a site immediately north of the University Club Conference Center, and remodeled as an Elizabethan theatre. The building is an elongated octagon on plan, constructed of ‘stick and shingle’. Its original site was on the southeast corner of California and Hutchison Drive. In its new location, Wyatt Pavilion is almost completely shrouded with mature redwoods around it. The University Club Conference Center wraps around an open court south of the Wyatt Pavilion, creating its own sense of place and community within, yet independent from the rest of the campus. Goal 1: While the Wyatt Pavilion has become an introverted, windowless performance space, the conference center is designed around the behavior of different groups of people, with closely related indoor and outdoor spaces. Goal 2: These two buildings are in a part of the campus that is isolated from other buildings, and heavily cloaked with big trees. The Wyatt Pavilion predates every other precedent on site for the scale, character and quality of architecture. The conference center has selected all three to promote its purpose, independent of campus precedent. Wyatt Pavilion is the oldest surviving structure on the campus, dating from 1907. It is obscured from view by mature redwoods. Goal 3: Both buildings enclose large spaces that are adaptable to many purposes. Goal 4: The University club extends an open, glazed façade across open lawns to the west, and commands a paved courtyard to the north, in both cases providing opportunities for building activities to extend out of doors. Wyatt Pavilion is almost completely hidden by the dense cocoon of trees that surround it. Goal 5: Loggias and wide, overhanging eaves fit the University club building to the climate. Once a self-ventilating agricultural building, Wyatt Pavilion has little but its reflective roof to fit it to the climate today. 63 Goal 6: As a regular polygon in plan, Wyatt Pavilion has few options to expand. The University Club, however, could add a third side to its courtyard if expansion were ever necessary. Goal 7: Though close to Soland Park, the buildings are well screened by mature trees. Goal 8: All predate the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Wood has been used for consistency with the historic structure of Wyatt Hall, and because its softness suits the functions of the University Club building. 64 The University Club Conference Center shares a wooded location with the Wyatt Pavilion Theatre. Primary Buildings on the Campus Buehler Alumni & Visitors Center The Buehler Alumni & Visitors Center provides a central reception facility with services for campus visitors. Strategically placed at the south entrance to the campus on Mrak Hall Drive, it is the first of a series of new facilities to be built south of Putah Creek. Freed by distance and visibility from the architectural parameters of the central campus, this building makes a notable departure into the post-modernist world of the 1990s. Terracotta colored banding wraps the walls and columns of the exterior, binding together a variety of concrete, stucco and split-block materials. A mannered temple form crowns the roof, with a south-facing tripartite portico above the main entrance loggia. Goal 1: Unlike almost every other building on the campus, the Buehler Center has been designed to be approached by car. Consequently, the side of it that faces towards the campus center is inaccessible. The south side has a welcoming and spacious entrance plaza, which encourages social interchange, once one has parked and left the vehicle. Goal 2: The Buehler Center takes no cue from the scale, quality or character of respected buildings on campus. Separated from them by Old Davis Road, it anticipates an entirely new approach to design at the South Entry to the campus. Goal 3: This is a facility designed for a specific set of functions, but has a certain inherent flexibility in the use of the larger spaces. The Buehler Alumni & Visitor Center, as the first public building in South Entry, made a complete departure from the architecture, materials and colors of earlier buildings on campus. Goal 4: Other than the entry plaza, the strongest relationship is to the parking lot immediately south of the building. Goal 5: The high entry plaza captures air movements and provides some shade for people beneath it and the building behind it. Windows in the central tower are deep-set to protect glazing from direct sun. Goal 6: The building was sited away from others, with room to expand. Goal 7: The Center is not visible from nearby residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: The design of the Buehler Center predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable. Goal 10: Split faced concrete block and stucco predominate as exterior finish materials. 65 Center for the Performing Arts A recurrent problem with performing arts buildings is the large volumes and blank walls that their internal functions generate. At UC Davis, a site has been selected that is independent of the architecture and scalar norms of the central campus, in which the volumes of the building are consistent with an adjacent parking garage, and with the nearby freeway. Thus the monumental south and west walls clad in sandstone are seen in the context of the larger landscape that contains the campus. The color of the golden sandstone varies, softening the mass, without detracting 66 from a clear statement as a point of entry to the campus. To the east and north, the scale steps down to meet that of the campus, forming small courtyards with lesser building volumes, housing offices, studio theatre and a student entry off an extension to an arboretum trail. A high trellis roof shades the open entry porch facing east onto Mrak Hall Drive. This roof keeps sun off the clear glass wall of the lobby, which at night glows like a massive and inviting lantern. There is shade too for people who congregate outside the foyer. Primary Buildings on the Campus Goal 1: Popular activity outside a performing arts center is concentrated around the box offices and main entrance. Here, these have been gathered under a high shade roof on a plaza fronting the main approach on Mrak Hall Drive. Goal 2: The scale of a performing arts center, especially of its large imperforate walls, makes it difficult to fit into an established campus. The location south of Old Davis Road selected for this facility minimizes those problems. An independent scale and architecture has been established between the Mondavi Performing Arts Center, the south entry parking structure and the Buehler Center in this separate enclave south of Putah Creek. Goal 3: Within the large volume of the performing arts building, there is room for considerable adaptation over time. Goal 4: The only relationships of importance to outdoor spaces are to the entry plaza and to Mrak Drive on which the plaza fronts. Goal 5: The high shade roof over the plaza and the screened windows at the south end of the foyer are direct responses to the climate. Goal 6: There is expansion space to the west of the building. Goal 7: The Center is visible from the highway, but is distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: The siting of the Mondavi Performing Arts Center is consistent the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: The Center is designed within sustainability parameters Goal 10: Quality materials and finishes have been used, with minimal maintenance a high priority. A high, open canopy floats above the entrance to the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. Fronting onto Mrak Hall Drive, the building respects the northsouth axis centered on Mrak Hall. 67 South Entry Parking Structure Featuring the same variegated golden sandstone as the Performing Arts Center, the South Entry Parking Structure is directly south of it across New Davis Road. A monumental stairway leads from the top deck to Mrak Hall Drive, giving direct access to the Performing Arts Center, and a one-block walk from the Buehler Alumni and Visitors Center. An elevator tower, also clad in sandstone, marks the northeast corner of the garage, forming a pleasing composition with the stairway. The east elevation of the garage is open to allow natural ventilation, but is barely visible from Mrak Hall Drive, being set back behind a formal garden of Mediterranean cypress trees ranged in tidy ranks across a hardscape of gravel and paving. Goal 1: Both a foil and a complement to the Performing Arts Center, a monumental stair at the northeast corner of the parking structure leads pedestrians to the entry plaza of the Performing Arts Center. Goal 2: The scale and style is that of the new south entry district described above. Goal 3: The parking structure could be expanded upwards, or duplicated nearby. Goal 4: A formal plantation along the east frontage of the garage celebrates Mrak Drive, and masks the scale of the structure. Goal 5: Open ventilation of the garage is achieved without exposing vehicles to view by use of ranks of cypress trees along the east façade. Overhead screens shade patrons awaiting elevators. 68 Goal 6: Infill growth is not anticipated, although parts of the structure could be adapted for other uses. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: The siting of the parking garage is consistent the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: The parking structure is designed within sustainability parameters Goal 10: Quality materials and finishes have been used, with minimal maintenance a high priority. From the east, the architecture of the parking structure fades to neutrality behind a formal garden of Italian cypress trees. Only a stairway and elevator tower signal the presence of the parking garage south of the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. Primary Buildings on the Campus THE HEALTH SCIENCES DISTRICT TERCERO HEALTH SCIENCES SOUTH ENTRY 69 Tupper Hall Designed in the fortress style of the mid 1970s, Tupper Hall (1977) consists of triple tiers of concrete balconies supported between massive and imperforate concrete service towers. The balconies screen deep-set strip windows. The effect of so much ribbed concrete is softened somewhat by planters around the base of the east side (main entry) of the building, and by lawns to the north and south. Servicing is accommodated in a large, unscreened yard on the west side of the building. Originally built in isolation, Tupper Hall is soon to become part of a community of health sciences buildings. Goal 1: Exterior spaces around Tupper Hall do not encourage people to linger. They accumulate instead between the medical science buildings, where spaces are more welcoming. Goal 2: Born of the 1970s neo-brutalist movement, the architect evidently found no reason to follow campus precedent in scale or character. Goal 3: Flexibility is limited to the stacks of spaces formed within the building, and is therefore limited. Goal 4: Landscaping has been used liberally to offset the stark and rugged concrete surfaces of the building. Changes in grade introduce lower outdoor spaces. The service yard on the west side is entirely unscreened, and detracts materially from the appearance of the whole. 70 Tupper Hall faces towards a group of single story medical health science buildings to the east. Goal 5: The deep overhangs above each window exclude direct solar access, and the thermal mass of the concrete tempers temperature changes within the building. Goal 6: Tupper Hall is a set piece building without any obvious way to expand it short of building a detached companion structure. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Durable materials have been used. The rugged concrete of Tupper Hall is softened by generous landscaping. Primary Buildings on the Campus Medical Sciences Buildings The three single story buildings grouped to the east of Tupper Hall are of an undistinguished architecture, yet the spaces between and around them successfully foster a sense of collegiality. This is attributable in part to the remoteness of the Health Sciences group from the rest of the campus, but also to successful landscaping. The buildings are of concrete panel construction with floor to ceiling windows set deep beneath a tall, wide fascia, with shallow pitched roofs above. Goal 1: The space between these three, simple, single story buildings is a popular gathering place. People also find the outer perimeters of the buildings sociable places. Goal 2: These buildings have the air of being temporary, and thus exempt from concerns of permanent architecture. They look impermanent compared with the massive Tupper Hall nearby. Goal 3: Presumably these buildings would be replaced with more permanent structures rather than investing in upgrading their systems. Goal 4: The scale of surrounding trees is in fortunate harmony with that of the buildings themselves. A casual yet positive dialogue exists between the buildings and the spaces between and around them. Goal 5: Large overhangs protect windows and doors, but otherwise there is no obvious response to climate in the building design. Goal 6: Infill would be accomplished by adding more freestanding building units. Spaces between the buildings are shaded by trees, and are much used for socializing and for study. Bicycles throng the eastern approaches to the Medical Science Buildings. The trees to the south and east of the Medical Sciences Buildings create a congenial place for study and recreation. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predates the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Durable materials have not been used; these appear to be temporary buildings. 71 Equine Analytical Laboratory The distinctive roof form and curved quadrant of the single story Equine Analytical Laboratory make it something of a landmark in the west part of the campus. It uses the ribbed massive concrete of Tupper Hall in a wall flanking the entrance, which opens onto a paved yard softened by perimeter landscaping. Viewed from the north, the building has a pastoral aspect to it. This is a building of unusual program that has its own distinct architecture, yet it is close enough in scale and materials to complement its utilitarian neighbor, the Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory. Goal 1: Not a place for people; porch space is minimal, and there is no furniture or other accommodation that would encourage lingering. Goal 2: Unrelated to any other structure on campus, though stylish in its own way. Goal 3: Each element of the building appears purpose built around a specific function. Goal 4: A paved area announces the building entrance, otherwise the high maintenance landscaping decorates a setback between the building and the street. Goal 5: Deep overhangs protect windows, and massive walls have thermal mass. Otherwise no special response to climate is evident. Goal 6: Expansion would be accomplished by constructing adjacent structures. 72 The radial sweep of the roof recalls wooden horse barns of the old West. The scale of the architecture is matched to an intimate garden yard by the entry. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Beyond the scope of the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Durable materials have been used. Primary Buildings on the Campus Despite visual references to old agricultural buildings, the Equine Analytical Laboratory is distinctive in style. There is little architectural precedent in this part of the campus, and the original forms of the building establish an identity for the place. 73 Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory Private and introverted in character, the Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory gives few clues to its function through the architecture. The masonry planes of the massive walls are relieved by incised bands of color. The whole building is set low into the landscape, giving it a bunker-like quality. Simple landscaping of trees and groundcover screen the building as is defers to its showy neighbor to the north. Goal 1: This is not a place for people apart from those engaged in serious work. No accommodation is made for leisurely congress outside the building. Goal 2: Massive masonry unrelated to either the central campus or to the historic agricultural buildings; a utilitarian structure with quality finishes built to last. Goal 3: A bunker-like building with unknown internal arrangements. Goal 4: Incidental relationship to outdoor spaces and landscape. Goal 5: This building creates its own artificial climate indoors. Deep windows and high thermal mass materials help in this climate. Goal 6: Expansion would be accomplished by constructing adjacent or adjoining structures. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Beyond the scope of the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Durable materials have been used. The Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory is larger than the adjoining Equine Analytical Lab, and understated architecturally. It uses good finishes on an unassuming but functional building. 74 Primary Buildings on the Campus Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital The Veterinary Medicine Teaching Hospital is a two story concrete building constructed in the late 1960’s. Employing the monumental institutional style of Edward Durrell Stone, the structure consists of solid, mostly windowless walls and rhythmic vertical columns cantilevering to a wide sculpted overhang and a flat roof. The pure rectangular mass sits on an elevated plinth, immune to expansion and resistant to contextual relationships. Goal 1: Solid and often windowless walls create an unsympathetic environment around the perimeter of the building. Social spaces are used out of necessity rather than choice. Goal 2: Independent of other architecture on the campus, a somewhat monumental style was used here to give prominence to an isolated building. Goal 3: High spaces and large volumes provide flexibility within the structural grid. Goal 4: Shade trees around the perimeter of the building frame outlooks across open land. Goal 5: Perimeter shade trees are the most conspicuous response to the climate. Goal 6: Expansion was achieved by building a separate structure to the southeast. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Beyond the scope of the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Durable materials have been used. The north entrance to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital opens onto a shady, north-facing terrace. Blank walls and high windows detract from this as an out-door study area. Shade trees wrap the perimeter of the building. 75 Old Horse Barn Built in 1928, this classic barn was actually constructed for mules, not horses. It is of traditional wood frame construction with a tiled, double gabled roof with intersecting gables at the center of each long elevation. A five-foot high masonry foundation wall functions as a protective wainscot for the walls. Pivoting sash windows and sliding wood doors wrap the exterior of the building, except under the mid point gables, where tall, sliding barn doors provide the principal points of access. Goal 1: Built so that both the animals and those tending them would be comfortable in all weathers. Goal 2: Designed as a traditional agricultural building, the scale of openings being determined by their functions. Goal 3: A large, open, wood framed structure such as this is capable of accepting many changes in use without major disruption. Goal 4: The chief open space to which the barn relates is the paddock and pens. Goal 5: The building is designed for controllable natural ventilation, and oriented to benefit from prevailing breezes in the hot weather. Goal 6: Expansion was achieved by building adjacent structures. Goal 7: Distant from residential neighborhoods. Goal 8: Predated the Long Range Development Plan. Goal 9: Not applicable Goal 10: Traditional materials have been used Monitors along the sides of the raised roof provide for convection cooling in the summer. 76 The Core Campus District The Core Campus Dist rict s 77 LONG RANGE DEVELOPMENT PLAN Five use districts overlay the traditional named districts, the boundaries often following principal streets. In designating Garden Walks and other connective features of the campus, master planners for the Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) have identified four use districts clustered around a central core of functions that serve and represent the entire University. A: Campus Commons The Campus Commons district (A) encompasses the Quad and the expanded Silo group. A new walkway will connect the west entrance of the Library to the intersection of California Avenue and Hutchison Drive – arguably the ‘100% corner’ of the campus. The original Walker Hall will remain, its south wings and the temporary buildings to the west will be replaced by the new walkway and other buildings. A. Campus Commons B E A C. Physical Sciences & Engineering D. Arts & Professional Schools, Visitor & Regional Amenities E. Social Sciences and Humanities A C D 78 B. Agricultural & Biological Sciences The Core Campus District Included with the Quad open space is the Memorial Union, Freeborn Hall and the bookstore to the north; North Hall, South Hall and Dutton Hall to the east; and the Shields library to the south. A The existing Silo group will be extended westward, and Surge Buildings I, II and III will be replaced. Thus the Commons District will extend from North Quad, via the Library to Bioletti Way south of Hutchison Drive. The district will be intersected by a number of walks and bicycle boulevards based on, and expanded from the grid of streets that preceded later additions to the campus. B: Agricultural & Biological Sciences B Northwest of the Commons District is the community of buildings that reaches from Hunt Hall in the north to Life Sciences in the southwest. Central to this Agricultural & Biological Sciences (B) is Storer Mall, which will be extended as a principal walkway to connect with the Quad. At its west end, Storer Mall intersects with a northsouth walkway in front of Briggs that will be extended south through Serge I, II and III and past the architects and engineers barn to the engineering complex and eventually to La Rue Road. 79 C: Physical Sciences & Engineering South of the Campus Commons district the Physical Sciences & Engineering district (C) extends from Bioletti Way in the west to Mrak Walk in the east and La Rue Road in the south. Bainer Hall Drive and its eastward extension to Mrak Hall will interconnect the various north-south circulation routes. C D: Arts & Professional Schools, Visitor & Regional Amenities Mrak Hall Drive extends across Putah Creek to the Center for the Arts, and to South Entry Park. These, together with facilities north and south of Lake Spafford, form the district of the central campus with the greatest potential for new development (D). Undeveloped sites exist between Mrak Walk and the Art building, and there are opportunities for development around the Environmental Horticulture complex on the south side of the creek. E: Social Sciences and Humanities East of the Campus Commons district and west of A Street is the Social Sciences and Humanities district (E). This extends from Olson Hall in the south to North Quad at A Street. Unlike any of the other central campus districts, this one shares a common boundary with the city of Davis. The surviving open space east of Dutton Hall is valued as a green edge of the campus defining it from downtown Davis. 80 D E Architectural Design Guidelines Architectural Design Guidelines 81 BUILDING SITING & ORIENTATION Guideline: Recognize established campus neighborhoods and districts within the campus and in adjoining parts of the City of Davis. (Goals 7 & 10) Commentary: The City of Davis and the University have grown up together, and share common boundaries along A Street and along Russell Blvd., which continues through the city as Fifth Street. Early buildings around the Quad were similar in scale and materials to residences across A Street, but postWW II buildings on the campus have departed from this model, and formed their own distinct districts. Six separate but adjoining communities or traditional districts are recognizable within the central campus: Quad, Storer, Silo, South Entry, Health Sciences, and Tercero. The sixth, Tercero, separates Silo and Health Sciences, but as yet includes no significant non-residential buildings. Apart from Tercero, there are four residential neighborhoods on campus: Aggie Village Neighborhood with Solano Park, Segundo with Orchard Park, Cuarto (across Russell Blvd from Orchard Park), and the Recreation & Housing area that includes the Colleges at La Rue. 82 The seam between campus and city neighborhood should be respected. For some districts, a distinctive identity is appropriate. Architectural Design Guidelines Significant streets, such as Hutchison Blvd. and California Ave. generally define the boundaries between districts, but the activities, buildings and landscape in each should be designed to respect features of those of neighboring districts. Views across boundaries should similarly be respected, to aid orientation, and reinforce the unity of the campus as a whole. Those same values should be respected across A Street and Russell Boulevard, where the campus adjoins the city. Within each district, one or more communities may be defined by similar uses or architecture. Identity within these groups is strengthened by a stricter adherence to like architecture and materials. Two such groups in the Silo district are the Silo group itself, and the adjacent chemistry and physics group. While architecture differs within each group, an essentially similar design vocabulary is maintained, giving a cohesive appearance to the whole. While the east wing of Engineering II and the west wings of Bainer Hall satisfy this criterion, they fail to address the needs of the space between them, leaving a sterile and unfriendly environment that is alien to the character of the Silo district and to the campus as a whole. Guidance to the design of such spaces follows. Views to adjoining districts within the campus aid orientation and add richness. 83 Guideline: Respond to the character of the compact campus core. (Goals 2, 3, 4, & 7) Commentary: The area north of Putah Creek, east of Bioletti Way, and south of Hoagland, Plant Sciences, Hunt and the Hickey Gym is the subject of this guideline. It is an area of intensive and varied activity in which pressure for building expansions and infill structures can be anticipated. Replacement of temporary buildings west of Silo, west of Walker and west of Engineering III are obvious opportunities. 84 Each new structure should be designed with evolution in mind; the likelihood that it will be modified or expanded at some time in its future. The location of each new building on its site and the placement of entrances and service access should take account of this probability without leaving the structure with the appearance of being incomplete. Bainer Hall Drive has been compromised as an east-west pedestrian route by massive blank walls. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Site and orient buildings to respect established axial relationships to other buildings and to features of the landscape. Recognize and respond to opportunities to create additional such relationships. (Goals 2, 5, 6, 7, & 10) Commentary: The siting of Dutton Hall relates its main entrance to the center of the central quadrangle, which is a primary point of orientation for those unfamiliar with the campus. It is also sited to complement both North Hall and South Hall, creating intimate outdoor spaces between them. Careful siting and orientation have enabled Dutton Hall to complete an identifiable group of buildings with a distinctive sense of place, and to relate them to the overall arrangement of the campus. Dutton Hall completes a community of buildings around usable open space that relates axially to the central Quad. Intimate outdoor space is created between Dutton, North, and South Halls. 85 Guideline: Acknowledge the primacy of people on foot in the design of buildings and associated open spaces throughout the campus. (Goal 1) Commentary: Vehicular and equipment needs are important, and must be fully accommodated. However, they, like the buildings and other facilities on campus, exist only to serve the needs of the people who constitute the University. This primacy of human activity, purpose and physical scale should be evident in the design of buildings and associated circulation and open spaces. The metrics of the human frame should be reflected throughout all buildings and associated spaces. Face-to-face meetings and places to congregate are of primary importance to the function of the University. 86 Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Locate service access so that vehicular routes conflict minimally with pedestrians and bicycles. (Goals 1, 3, 8, & 9) Commentary: While service arrangements for each building have generally been provided, access to service yards and entries often conflicts with other circulation routing. Complete segregation of routes is not achievable in many instances. However, opportunities should be sought to group service access points with those of existing buildings, where outdoor storage and mechanical plant may also be co-located, and screened from view. Some buildings, such as Hoagland and Hutchison are ambivalent in their orientation, so that the functions of ‘back’ and ‘front’ are unclear. This makes segregation of traffic difficult to achieve. Sometimes infill development will create such a circumstance – as in the case of Wickson, whose loading dock was effectively blocked by the construction of Kerr and Wellman halls. Separation of service yards from pedestrian access is important. Where possible, group service functions for several buildings together. Compromised service access leads to unsightly improvisations and adds to labor. 87 Guideline: Align buildings with relevant setback lines, acknowledging street grids where appropriate. (Goals 2 & 4) Commentary: An important and valued feature of the campus is the quality of its streets, pathways and open spaces. They depend for their definition on the buildings that line them and in many cases, on avenues of mature trees. These open spaces are most clearly defined when building frontages adhere to a consistent and readable line. The effects of this can be seen at the east end of Hutchison Drive, where buildings to the south form a consistent street wall, but Sproul, and particularly Olson are set back too far to support definition of the street. A focal open space shared by Music, Art and Wright Hall contributes to the sense of community between all three buildings. By contrast, the much larger space across Hutchison Drive lacks definition by architectural enclosure, and makes no real contribution to the quality of the environment. This underlines the importance of identifying the particular relevance of each setback line for each building, sometimes in more than one direction. 88 Sproul Hall breaks ranks with adjacent buildings, leaving an ill-defined edge to the street and an unresolved relationship between the buildings. Architectural Design Guidelines At the east end of Hutchison Drive, buildings to the south form a consistent street wall that is complemented by the avenue of trees lining the street. 89 Guideline: Orient building entrances and building facades with view corridors. (Goals 2 & 4) Commentary: A classic example is the axial relationship of Mrak Hall with Mrak Hall Drive, a principal entrance to the campus. Not only does the building command views of those arriving, it is also a point of reference from the north, for views of it along West Quad from as far away as Hunt Hall remain partially unobstructed. The wide visibility of such landmarks is helpful to visitors in making the campus understandable. A lesser example is Haring Hall, whose distinctive entrance design terminates westward views along First Street as it becomes Peter Shields Avenue within the campus. Many opportunities exist to relate buildings and spaces to one another in like manner throughout the campus. For example, if parking lots to the east and west of Meyer Hall were developed, it is hoped that the strong axis established by Meyer’s internal paseo would be responded to by new adjacent buildings with major entries or other features. A signal opportunity is to connect the west entrance of the Shields Library to the Silo by a new axial walkway. This would displace the south wings of Walker Hall, leaving the original building intact. 90 Haring Hall terminates views west along Peter Shields Avenue. The strong axis established by the paseo in Myer Hall could link future buildings to the east and west. Mrak Hall commands vistas to the north and south, making it an effective landmark even when glimpsed between the trees. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Identify potential views from within proposed buildings, and orient windows to take full advantage of them. (Goals 1 & 4) Commentary: Just as Mrak Hall enjoys commanding views across the campus by virtue of its location, orientation and height, so many other buildings on campus may have similar, if less grand views available to them. For the occupants of a building, the views afforded from each room can be among its most significant features. In most cases, views will be to the near or middle distance. They provide a means of capitalizing on the finer qualities of the campus, and reinforcing the sense of collegiality among campus users. Taller buildings can capitalize on distant views over the treetops. 91 Guideline: Orient buildings to minimize solar gain and maximize usable daylight. The type, size and locations of nearby trees will also influence these. (Goals 1, 3, 5, 9, & 10) Commentary: The cooling loads of buildings can be reduced significantly by excluding morning and evening penetration of direct sunlight through windows. This can be done by appropriate orientation of the building, by location and configuration of windows, and by external screening, as, for example, is sometimes provided by existing mature evergreen trees. However, exclusion of direct sun should not exclude useful daylight, nor unduly limit views into and out of a building. The needs and opportunities for solar exclusion, daylighting and view capture are typically quite different on each face of a building, and so should be considered separately. Too often in the past, architectural formalism has displaced such thinking, creating buildings that address their surroundings poorly, increase energy needs unnecessarily, and deprive occupants of unique views. 92 For many, intimate views of the landscape close by can give a sense of tranquility. Strongly directional windows can provide views and admit natural light, yet exclude the direct sun. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Buildings should be sited, oriented and configured to take advantage of natural ventilation opportunities. (Goals 5, 6, 9, & 10) Commentary: Natural ventilation depends on reliable differences in air pressure. These may be differences from one side of a building and another due to prevailing winds, or differences in temperature that give rise to convection. A building can use cross-ventilation to advantage if it is oriented to face prevailing winds during the season in which cooling loads are greatest. As wind strikes the building, pressure on the windward side will increase, and eddies on the leeward side will cause a drop in air pressure. Wind pressure can be increased by the venturi effect of construction by structures or natural features upwind. Reduction of pressure on the leeward side also increases with the height of the building, and the distance from the next building or other obstruction downwind. A passage through the building connecting upwind and downwind sides will displace air from the building, thus relieving the load on mechanical equipment. If air intakes on the windward side of the building are close to irrigated landscape, then incoming breezes will be cooled somewhat. Intakes near traffic or other sources of pollution should be avoided. Convection or stack cooling depends on the displacement of warm air by cooler, denser air. In its simplest form, this is accomplished by providing an air intake at ground floor or basement level, and on air escape at the top of the space, via an open window or vent. Porches, verandahs and other outdoor spaces can similarly benefit from appropriate orientation to make them more comfortable through natural ventilation. 93 Guideline: Favor defined and recessed window openings to ameliorate the apparent scale of walls and limit solar gain. (Goals 9 & 10) Commentary: Academic Surge presents a glass curtain wall to the west, which is part reflective, part transparent. Glazing bars visibly subdivide the wall in a way that disguises stories and other characteristics. There is no solar protection other than reflective and absorptive qualities of the glass. Engineering II does something similar with a panelized blank wall, while windows are flush and unprotected. By contrast, the new Plant Sciences building defines each window unit architecturally, and recesses the glass deeply behind the wall surface to shade it. Splayed sills increase reflected daylight access into the interior. A tessellation pattern on the wall surface further reduces the overall scale of the surfaces, especially in locations where there are no windows. Recessed glass and reflective sills admit daylight but block direct sun. Windowless walls contribute to a sterile outdoor environment. 94 Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Limit blank walls at ground level, to increase visual interest and to provide oversight of walkways for safety. (Goals 1, 4, & 7) Commentary: It should be a clear objective to expose the life of a building to the outside, to provide views and daylight for occupants, bearing in mind the enhanced campus safety to which this will contribute. The Memorial Union dining commons has windows round most of the perimeter that make tables close to the window comfortable and attractive - providing surveillance over nearby circulation areas, and presenting an interesting prospect for passers by. The transparency of the Commons walls serves both the building occupants and passers-by well. By contrast, Engineering II and the south wing of Bainer Hall create hostile pedes- trian environments with blank walls at ground level, and deny visual access into or out of the buildings. Sometimes the functions of a building necessitate an absence of daylight, but it is generally possible to plan a building so that such uses do not occupy outside walls where people circulate. Visible activity inside the Commons makes the space outside feel both safe and inviting. 95 Guideline: Limit the use of highly reflective materials. (Goals 9 & 10) Commentary: Misdirected lights, especially glare, are irritants in any environment. In a climate where the sun is strong and persistent, as at UC Davis, it is important to avoid large reflective areas, such as walls of mirrored glass. Windows that are recessed or otherwise shaded from direct sun avoid the need for highly reflective coatings, and will rarely cause glare. In extreme cases, reflective building surfaces reflect sufficient heat to damage trees and other plants. Reflective materials should only be used to accentuate certain architectural details, and should not be used over large surfaces. Academic Surge presents a glass curtain wall to the west. There is no solar protection other than the reflective surface of the glass. Glazing bars introduce a scale unrelated to the building’s purpose or to the architecture of its neighbors. 96 Architectural Design Guidelines Pierced window openings with deep reveals admit light and avoid glare. 97 BUILDING USES & ACTIVITY Guideline: Distinguish the use of each building type by its architecture, yet relate each type to its neighbors; a human scale should be common to all. (Goals 1, 2, 4, & 5) Commentary: Some buildings, such as the Social Sciences and Humanities building, isolate themselves from their surroundings to assert their own architecture; in this case, one that subjugates human scale and discourages gregarious social behavior. Hart Hall, Wellman and Health Science Group are academic buildings that acknowledge the importance of creating places for informal study and socializing. They provide spaces in which people feel welcome to linger, in the process enriching the campus as a place of collective intellectual achievement. Spacious verandas overlooking the West Quad provide a respite from classrooms behind them. Distinguish the use of each building type by its architecture, yet relate each type to its neighbors; a human scale should be common to all. 98 Architectural Design Guidelines A quiet court behind Hart Hall invites outdoor study. While modest as architecture, the HS Group of buildings encourage collegiate behavior... ... by contrast, the Humanities Building subjugates human activity to architectural formalism. 99 Guideline: Address active outdoor areas, such as walkways, with active building frontage uses wherever possible. (Goals 1 & 4) Commentary: The open verandahs of North and South halls invite occupants to occupy them, and as a consequence, that part of East Quad is an attractive place to walk, and the quad itself benefits from an active edge. The same can be said of the west side of the library, where a busy entrance, seating, sun and shade invite people to linger. By contrast, the north side of the library, although it faces the Quad, is not an active space as it lacks an active building frontage. Buildings that distance themselves from sidewalks and conceal their activities, such as the Social Sciences and Humanities Building, create a sterile environment that actively discourages gregarious behavior. The entrance terrace at the Library is a place to meet people from every discipline. Inactive building frontages downgrade the spaces outside as social places. Open porches allow the occupants to see and be seen by passers by on East Quad. 100 Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Locate primary building entrances in conspicuous locations and provide them with shade, shelter and seating to encourage informal gatherings. (Goals 1 & 5) Commentary: There is an interesting contrast between two building entrances on the north side of Storer Mall. One has a shaded porch, low walls and landscaping, but lacks the critical element of generous shade outside the entrance itself. A few paces to the east is an entrance that has broader steps, more open space, but lacks shade and does not invite people to linger. Another need close by each building entrance but outside the main circulation system, is somewhere to secure bicycles. A shady spot by a building entrance is a popular spot to chat and to study. Collegiality thrives as much in spaces like these as in the classroom, and they should be considered as important components in the design program of every building. A functional but uninviting space outside Hutchinson Hall Storer Hall has a shady and inviting spot to congregate outside. Collegiality is cultivated by such spaces. 101 Guideline: Provide bike storage conveniently near, but clear of building entrances and emergency vehicle routes. (Goals 1, 4, 9, & 10) Commentary: The necessity of ubiquitous bike storage is obvious to anyone with even a superficial knowledge of the U. C. Davis campus. The design of storage equipment, and its precise location relative to building entrances and circulation routes should be carefully considered. For many students, their bicycle is among the most valuable of their possessions, and is to be treated with some care. A storage place must therefore be secure, and must protect the bicycle from damage. The widely used concrete blocks with a wheel slot do not meet these criteria: many standard locking devices cannot be used with them, and if undue loads are imposed, the wheel in its concrete slot may be damaged. Racks that separate machines effectively and accommodate most locking devices are preferred. Even if an acceptable rack is provided, if it is too far from the building entrance it will not be used, and bicycles will instead obstruct buildings, be secured to poles or other convenient anchors, and may obstruct access for pedestrians and emergency vehicles. Bicycle storage should be considered as part of the design program for each building and the landscape near its entrances. 102 Racks should support bikes properly – not just by wheel rims, as shown below. Where insufficient or inappropriate bike storage is available, bicycles will clutter building entrances and approaches. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Minimize the use of temporary buildings on campus. (Goals 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, & 10) Commentary: As is amply demonstrated on the UC Davis campus, temporary buildings can be remarkable long lived. This is undesirable for three reasons. One, temporary buildings are typically exempted from consideration of architectural and urban design criteria, and so degrade the overall quality of the built environment. Two, although temporary, they remove from consideration some sites for permanent buildings. Three, they represent poor investment of resources in the long term: money, energy and non-reusable materials. Temporary buildings often occupy their sites for many years, displacing new permanent buildings to less suitable sites. 103 BUILDING CONFIGURATION & APPEARANCE Guideline: Articulate the massing of new buildings so that volumes and surfaces are consistent in scale with those of neighboring structures, and fit the character of the campus as a whole. [This does not suggest emulation of insensitively configured buildings.] (Goals 2, 4, 6, & 8) Commentary: Many future campus buildings will necessarily occupy infill sites between existing structures. It is particularly important that these respect features of their neighbors, such as orientation, overall building mass, height, materials, and articulation of surfaces. Respect of neighboring buildings does not imply matching or emulating what is there. It does suggest designing each building as a part of a cohesive group. A successful new building will enhance, rather than detract from the existing built environment. A case in point is Dutton Hall, which unifies North and South halls, at the same time, making an ensemble that contributes more to the campus than any of the three buildings on its own (see page 58). Sometimes, there are features of the existing building that are no longer appreciated as perhaps they once were. Briggs Hall, while functionally a vital part of the campus, is clad in an architecture that seems brutal by today’s standards. The Life 104 Awkward juxtapositions such as this should be avoided. Life Sciences respects the scale and rhythms of Briggs Hall, but asserts its own architecture suitable to a courtyard in which people congregate. Sciences building that extends Briggs to the south and west acknowledges the massing, height and architectural rhythms of its older neighbor, but presents a more humane face to the world. Also, while relating to Briggs where directly adjacent to it, the new building acknowledges a different Architectural Design Guidelines Life Sciences is conceived as an expansion of the Briggs Hall complex. relationship towards Hutchison Drive, with a formal entrance at the southwest corner. There are instances on campus where new buildings have ignored their neighbors - as for example Voorhies Hall, which presents a massive and imperforate concrete tower to University House, a craftsman cottage dating from 1907. 105 Guideline: Limit sheer building height to that of ‘classic’ and adjacent buildings on campus, with taller elements stepping back from frontages. (Goals 2, 3, 6, & 8) Commentary: The Long Range Plan noted that as space on campus becomes scarcer, taller buildings should become the norm. The first buildings on campus were of one or two stories. Mrak Hall and Storer Hall are six and seven stories respectively, but the majority of buildings in the central campus are three or four stories high. This is a height range that has been able to satisfy a number of technical and financial constraints in recent academic buildings, at the same time achieving relatively high densities without compromising relationships with adjacent buildings or landscape. Generally speaking, new buildings should be taller than the first generation of campus buildings, except those adjacent to permanent smaller scale buildings such as the Silo group. If a greater volume is necessary to the function of the building, as in the case of the Wright Theatre next to the Music building, then a setback or other architectural device should reconcile the scale of the taller building with that of its smaller neighbor. 106 The consistent style and scale of the Silo complex has been respected by recent additions. The tall fly tower of the Wright Theatre is reconciled with its smaller neighbors by deliberate architectural intervention. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Use roof forms that effectively screen rooftop equipment from views from taller buildings. (Goals 3 & 7) An undisciplined array of equipment has accumulated on the skyline of Hutchinson Hall. Commentary: A phenomenon that UC Davis has largely avoided to date is that of carefully designed buildings spoiled by an accumulation of air handling and other equipment on the roof. Such plant should be considered an integral part of the architecture, and screened appropriately, in a manner consistent with the appearance of the building and the character of the campus. Equipment on Hutchison Hall’s roof appears to have been added in a haphazard way, without regard to the cluttered skyline created. Laboratories pose particular problems in this regard, with numerous fume hood stacks and ancillary equipment to deal with. Housing for this equipment should be spacious enough to allow for inevitable additions and upgrades of equipment in future. Laboratory stacks close to Hutchinson Drive are screened by a pitched roof structure. 107 Guideline: Screening of equipment in, on or adjacent to buildings should be fully integrated with the architecture of each building. (Goals 2, 3, 4, & 10) Commentary: Screening of rooftop equipment is addressed in the preceding guidelines. Some buildings have air handling equipment, standby generators or other equipment on the ground adjacent to the building served. That these should be adequately soundproofed and screened from view goes without saying, but it is important that screening or complete enclosure should be designed to be compatible with the building served and other nearby buildings and landscape features. Screening on the south side of Engineering II is consistent with the architecture of the building proper, but confronts users of Bainer Hall Drive with a blank wall, which detracts seriously from the quality of the approach to the main entrance to the building. 108 The Silo service yard awaits another building to share and screen it. Service yards pose a different problem, for vehicular access to loading docks, outdoor storage, dumpsters and wash-down areas demand a large area. Screening of such areas with hedges, as at the Enology Building, is an effective but space-consuming solution. A more satisfactory solution, especially as infill buildings are added, is to group the service entrances of two or more buildings around a shared yard that is largely enclosed by the buildings served. Such an approach could be taken when the Silo complex is expanded to the west, using the new buildings to enclose the existing open service yard. Architectural Design Guidelines An unscreened service yard on the west side of Tupper Hall greets visitors who use the adjacent parking lot. The Enology service yard is effectively screened with hedges. 109 Guideline: Use only quality building materials of known longevity, such as masonry, stone, tile, precast concrete, glass and metal. (Goals 3, 9, &10) Commentary: Some buildings on the campus have been in use for almost a century, and it is not unreasonable to suppose that new buildings and extensions of existing structures will remain in use for just as long. It is therefore necessary to consider the long life-cycle costs associated with building materials, selecting only those that will continue to serve their functions effectively over a long period of time with relatively little maintenance. The climate at Davis fortunately spares buildings from the rigors of freeze-thaw cycles and excessive moisture, but the effects of exterior heat and ultra-violet radiation must be considered. At the same time, energy conservation and other operation and maintenance costs must be factored in. The premium paid for high quality, durable materials can be recovered in a relatively short payback period for buildings that are expected to be used, adapted and used again for many decades, thereby reducing the environmental and economic impact of repeated raw materials extraction. The transit center at the North Gate Entry is built to last with robust and sustainable materials suited to the climate of UC Davis. 110 Several buildings on campus have been in use for almost a century. The same expectation should be made of new buildings. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Exceptions to long-life building materials may be made for reasons of consistency with historic structures, and in the cases of lesser, utilitarian structures. (Goals 2, 4, 5, 9, & 10) Commentary: Dutton Hall, additions to the Silo group, and outbuildings associated with the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital have been built with timber shingles and other relatively short-lived cladding materials for reasons of consistency with the architecture of pre-existing adjacent buildings. This is entirely appropriate. However, such buildings should take advantage of current technology and materials to minimize life-cycle costs by using effective insulation, moisture and fire protection etcetera. The Silo complex is characterized by wood shingle-clad buildings; a justifiable exception to use of long-life materials. Utilitarian agricultural buildings outside the central campus are excepted from guidelines on materials. 111 Guideline: Select building material colors that enhance the quality and efficiency of the built environment. (Goals 5, 9, & 10) Commentary: The climate at U.C. Davis makes cooling loads greater than heating loads, so solar gain by buildings is a concern. Light colors reflect more energy than dark colors. Thus dark colored materials will generally increase the load of a building in direct sunlight. On the other hand, dark materials tend to radiate heat away from the building most efficiently: an advantage while the building is being cooled, but a disadvantage when it is being heated. On balance, light colors are more thermally efficient on the exterior of buildings. Light colors can cause glare in bright sunlight, and there are many circumstances in which light-to-mid-toned colors may be preferable. A beneficial effect of highly reflective light colors is in reflecting daylight into an interior space - thus the preference often shown for white light-shelves and window frames. From a maintenance standpoint, integral color is generally preferred over applied color, especially where repainting is labor intensive - window frames, for example. Where paint is used in direct sunlight, lighter colors will experience less thermal movement than dark colors, and will usually last longer. 112 Sproul Hall’s south elevation is predominantly white, with deep light baffles around windows that admit daylight but exclude glare and direct sun. There may be aesthetic or other reasons for using dark colored exterior materials, but predominant materials, such as wall finishes, will generally perform better if they are light colored. With these considerations in mind, and in consideration of established colors and materials in use on campus, the following general color palettes are recommended: 1. Generally: -Walls of light colored concrete or stucco, or red brick in shaded locations. - Roofing materials in the same color register as the roof tiles used in Hart and Walker (i.e. mid-toned colors). - Window frames in light-colored, selffinished materials, except where glare from sources outside is a problem, or where special aesthetic considerations prevail. 2. Established ‘stick and shingle’ locations, including East Quad, Silo District and the vicinity of the Wyatt Pavilion. - Wood frames and shingles. Architectural Design Guidelines BUILDING STRUCTURE Guideline: To the extent possible, address seismic stability needs within the core and perimeter walls of buildings, to maximize flexibility in the use of assignable space. Avoid load-bearing partitions. (Goals 3, 9, & 10) Commentary: It is inevitable that the uses for which a university building is originally programmed will change over time. It is prudent to design all buildings on campus with a ‘long life, loose fit’ philosophy. Those that become obsolete and have to be demolished are those that are not adaptable. The University has been conservative in its requirements for seismic stability, and as a consequence, the recent upgrade in state seismic requirements has put none of the newer buildings out of conformance with the more stringent requirements. This conservatism should continue, but the means of stiffening structures should interfere as little as possible with the subdivision of assignable space. Building cores, stair towers and exterior walls should bear as much of the structural load as possible so that all other partitions can be moved or removed. Buildings with generous interior spaces have proved easiest to adapt to changing needs. 113 Upgrading and replacement of mechanical equipment should be planned for inside every building. Guideline: Select structural systems and floor-to-floor heights that will accommodate future remodeling for other uses, and replacement of HVAC and other equipment. (Goals 3, 9, & 10) Commentary: Replacement of obsolete air handling equipment and introduction of air conditioning and other ductwork in some older buildings on campus has been costly or impracticable because of limited space above suspended ceilings and under structural members. If 114 anticipated from the outset of structural design, the cost of adequate space for upgrades and replacement of equipment, not to mention simplification of initial installations, can be minimal. This simple precaution can lengthen the useful life of a building considerably, the substantially increasing the return on investment to the University over time. It can also avoid future disfigurement of the building with exterior-mounted ‘add-on’ equipment, which should be prohibited. Architectural Design Guidelines BUILDING STEWARDSHIP AND SUSTAINABILITY Guideline: Evaluate materials and systems based on life cycle costs rather than on capital costs alone. (Goals 3, 9, & 10) Guideline: Evaluate systems that use natural ventilation, heating and cooling during certain periods of the year. (Goals 5, 9, & 10 Commentary: It is not merely a matter of principle, but of fiscal responsibility that requires all new buildings and remodels to select building materials and systems that will conserve energy and other resources over the long term. There is now a sufficient body of information available concerning the longevity and probable maintenance needs of different building materials and systems that life-cycle costs can be projected with some confidence. University buildings can be expected to remain in continuous use for many decades, so long term operation and maintenance costs must be carefully weighed against initial capital costs of materials and systems early in the design process, so that prudent choices can be made in a timely fashion. Commentary: Consider the use of natural vent, heating, and cooling strategies to enhance the functioning of the buildings’ mechanical systems. Complimentary systems such as these reduce load on HVAC. By combining such strategies with emerging technologies like displacement ventilation, university facilities will be most prepared to take advantage of passive systems. Involvement of mechanical engineers early in the design process can result in less costly equipment and operations by using natural ventilation. 115 Guideline: Orient buildings to minimize solar gain and maximize usable daylight. (Goals 5, 9, & 10) Commentary: Shading devices are often ineffective in preventing solar gain when the sun angle is low in the early morning and the evening. Prevention of insolation at these times can significantly lower the cooling load of a building. Orienting the building, or windows within it can ensure that such exposure does not occur. Shading a building from morning and evening sun with trees can achieve the same result. Since only mature trees are effective in this role, it may be necessary to site a building so that it can benefit from existing trees. However, shading should not exclude usable daylight. Some buildings have made use of light shelves that reflect daylight onto ceilings, thus providing some illumination without glare or significant thermal gain. 116 Every stage of the design process, from building siting through contract administration, should be responsive to sustainability opportunities. Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Consider the placement, eventual size and density of trees planted near buildings in relation to solar gain and natural daylight use. (Goals 2, 4, 5, & 9) Commentary: There are places on campus where redwoods have been planted where they will become too large, obliterating light and unbalancing the space around them. Removal of mature trees invariably becomes an emotional and controversial issue. The species and location of trees planted in association with a building should be carefully assessed for their long term effects on daylight and views, as well as potential reductions in solar gain for exterior as well as interior spaces. By shading the surfaces at the perimeter of a building, heat island effect is reducedcreating a reduced cooling load for the buildings mechanical system. Guideline: Progressively replace existing fixtures with water-conserving fixtures. (Goals 3 & 9) Commentary: As buildings are remodeled, and new buildings are designed, specify plumbing fixtures that conserve water. In the case of hot water fixtures, this will of course also result in energy conservation. Reduction in water use will effectively increase the capacity of the existing waste water system. Emerging technologies like waterless urinals can significantly reduce potable water consumption. 117 Guideline: Use storm runoff from roofs to recharge irrigation systems. (Goals 6 & 9) Guideline: Select locally manufactured materials to limit transport-related costs and impacts. (Goals 9 & 10) Commentary: Additional development will result in an increase in impermeable surfaces, and an increase in the volume of storm runoff. When storm runoff is sent directly to storm drains, pollution often results from combined sewage overflows that occur during storms. In addition to maximizing permeable surfaces, it may be possible to divert runoff to reservoirs for subsequent use in irrigation. This would result in decreased water supply demands, and reduced peak demands on the storm drainage system. Commentary: Materials with a universal pricing structure, such as cement, average and incorporate transportation costs, so there is no direct saving in using locally produced building materials. However, supporting the local economy can reap indirect benefits, as can reduction of transport-related costs and impacts: air pollution, energy consumption, infrastructure and other hidden costs. evapotranspiration precipitation storm runoff storm runoff collection 118 landscape irrigation Architectural Design Guidelines Guideline: Specify materials manufactured using environmentally sound production processes and renewable material sources. Favor certified wood products and recycled content materials. (Goal 9) Commentary: This relates more to community values than to the economics or aesthetics of architecture. It does, however, appear to be consistent with U. C. Davis’ philosophy of environmental responsibility, and is competitive or in many cases achievable at similar first cost. Guideline: Use materials that are durable, require limited maintenance, and are recyclable. (Goals 9 & 10) Commentary: Apart from aspects of environmental responsibility, this guideline relates to fiscally responsible design for structures with long life expectancy with continued University ownership and operation. Reduced maintenance costs over the long term can justify higher initial costs for quality materials. Guideline: Eliminate CFCs, HCFC, Halons and volatile organic compounds in building materials, mechanical systems, paints and adhesives. (Goal 9) Commentary: Air quality legislation continues to tighten restrictions on harmful agents, so in order to avoid having to replace equipment to stay in compliance, it would be wise to avoid CFCs and other compounds that are known to be harmful to the environment, even if there is a small cost premium involved. A healthy work and academic environment can help improve occupant health and reduce the University’s liability. Guideline: Accommodate reclamation and recycling of chemicals in buildings; Accommodate solid waste recycling within all new and remodeled buildings; Protect indoor environmental quality. (Goal 3 & 9) Commentary: This guideline is already followed to a significant extent. However, recycling opportunities change over time, and physical accommodation needs may change too, so flexible initial design is recommended. 119 Guideline: Increase building materials salvage and construction waste recycling rates; Encourage energy auditing by suppliers. (Goal 3, 9, & 10) Commentary: Building contractors are increasingly required to follow such practices by their clients. Waste salvage and recycling infrastructure is responding with increased sophistication, and high rates of waster recovery are being achieved in many regions. If the University wishes to implement them, recycling and disposal protocols can be made uniform and mandatory across the campus. Similarly, suppliers will undertake energy auditing in order to qualify as suppliers to the University. Guideline: Increase on-site effluent treatment from laboratories and agricultural buildings to protect the campus environment. (Goal 9) Commentary: At-source waste treatment may have limited applicability, but can be cost effective if avoidance of contamination of mass effluent simplifies its treatment. It may become a necessity as state and federal authorities more closely regulate specific substance content, such as heavy metals concentrations. This could also provide an educational opportunity for the study of biological treatment of waste water by UC Davis hydrologists or environmental scientists. 120 Guideline: Make consistent use of performance measures to determine the environmental and cost effectiveness of energy reduction and sustainability investments. (Goals 9 & 10) Commentary: Without empirical data, the economic value of implementing sustainability measures cannot be properly understood. For example, the premium paid for low energy equipment is open to challenge during value engineering, and only experiential cost information can lead to an appropriate decision. Use energy studies as part of the design process to inform selection of systems and components. Consider use of a commissioning agent prior to building occupancy to determine design effectiveness and assume proper understanding of equipment operation by facilities staff. Guideline: Use a consistent and tested set of guidelines to achieve project-wide sustainability. (Goal 9) Commentary: LEED, though imperfect, is a valuable tool for design teams for evaluating progress along set criteria. It could enable the university to measure its success against stated goals for project sustainability and to substantiate any claims to green building or sustainable design. Campus Furniture Design Guidelines Campus Furniture Design Guidelines 121 CAMPUS FURNITURE DESIGN GUIDELINES Recurrent themes in the preceding Architectural Design Guidelines have been relationships to human scale and encouragement of collegial behavior among building users. These recognize activity in the space around buildings as much as within them, so it is appropriate to supplement the Architectural Design Guidelines with some guidance on the design and placement of campus furniture. The following topics are addressed: • Lighting • Seating • Trash Receptacles • Bicycle Racks • Bollards • Poles • Signage • Traffic Controls • Fountains • Drinking Fountains • Sculpture and Other Art Pieces • Telephones • Newspaper Vending 122 Lighting Sufficient and appropriate lighting is essential to a sense of personal safety for every campus user after dark. By day, light fixtures are often conspicuous features of the campus, so their appearance relative to their surroundings must be carefully considered. Traditionally, lighting for vehicular traffic has been designed separately from pedestrian lighting, but on the UC Davis campus, both are so closely integrated that they must necessarily be designed as a coordinated system. This suggests reassessment of the design parameters for both vehicular and pedestrian lighting so that as new fixtures are added and old fixtures are replaced, each complements and supports the other. There are some principles that are shared by both: 1. The purpose of street and pathway lighting is to make vehicles and people’s faces visible and recognizable. Too often, the ground plane alone is lit. 2. The efficiency and cost effectiveness of any fixture depends on light falling on its intended target alone. All light that is directed elsewhere is wasted, and should be minimized. Campus Furniture Design Guidelines 3. With the exception of light used to 4. 5. 6. 7. feature architecture or other subjects, light should not be directed above head height. Upward directed light not only wastes energy, it intrudes where it is often a nuisance – into other properties and into the night sky. Light sources should be designed to avoid glare. This is accomplished by height above walkers, riders and drivers, suitable brightness and diffusion of point sources. Illumination levels should be sufficient to enable recognition at a safe distance, but should not be so great that adjacent unlit areas are made impenetrably dark by contrast. Recognition is best achieved with white light; colored light sources, such as sodium and mercury vapor, distort color and confuse senses that are attuned to natural daylight. Deciduous trees near outdoor lighting can change its effectiveness dramatically between seasons. All trees and shrubs grow bulkier with time, and their effects upon lighting must be monitored. These fixtures diffuse light to reduce glare, and direct it laterally, with a cap that prevents light from shining into upper-story windows or into the night sky. They are twelve feet high and have metal halide luminaries, which emit white light, aiding recognition. These principles are true of all outdoor lighting, whether freestanding fixtures along a path or a street or in a parking lot – or a fixture attached to a building. Some commonly used fixtures – such as cobra-head fixtures used along some streets at UC Davis - fail several of the principles, and should be avoided in future. 123 Seating The purpose of seating on campus is mostly to provide places for outdoor study, and to encourage collegial socializing. The climate is conducive to year-round use of outdoor seating, with shady locations favored in the summer and sunny spots in the cooler months. People like to be strategically placed to observe the coming and going of others, and this too should be considered when seating is being positioned on site. The design of seating requires: • Durable construction and finishes, • Compatibility in design and appearance with other campus furnishings, and with adjacent architecture, • Ability to shed rainwater an irrigation water quickly, • Open sightlines with nowhere for litter to accumulate, • Firm attachment to the ground – except for movable seating. Location of seating should be: • Near building entrances and walkways, • Oriented to provide interesting and varied views, • Away from irrigation heads and vehicle splashes, • Available in sun or shade, • Near transit stops, with a clear view of approaching buses. These white enameled benches constructed from recycled steel tube meet all of the design criteria listed above. These are grouped near the entrance of Dutton Hall, and are variously in sun and shade at different times of the day. 124 Campus Furniture Design Guidelines Trash and Recycling Receptacles Square containers made of precast concrete have become the campus standard, with the name of the University, or the universal recycling symbol raised on one side and painted blue. Also in wide use is a timber-clad cylinder with a blue plastic dome cover. Design features of the trash and recycling receptacles are: • Durable construction and finish, • Recognizable design, • Accommodate standard, easily removable liner, • Conceal contents from view, • Tall enough to be a visible obstacle to the partially-sighted, • Minimize access to rain and irrigation sprinklers, • Not prone to being moved or tipped over, • Tolerant of rough usage and resistant to fire, • No sharp corners, • Capable of being hosed down. Well placed litter and recycling receptacles near pedestrian routes and sitting areas Location should be: • Near seating, crosswalks and transit stops, • Accessible to service vehicles, • Clear of pedestrian and bicycle through routes, especially emergency exit routes. 125 Bicycle Racks Bicycles are such a major part of life at UC Davis that a special design guideline is devoted to their storage in the preceding Architectural Design Guidelines: Guideline: Provide bike storage conveniently near, but clear of building entrances and emergency vehicle routes. Some design considerations are: • A storage space must protect bicycles from damage, • Standard locking devices must be accommodated by the storage rack, • Bicycles must be sufficiently separated from one-another that they can be individually removed without damage to adjacent bicycles, • A sufficient number of spaces should be provided to accommodate overlapping demands at class changes. Location of bicycle storage racks is governed largely by the availability of space where it is needed, but if not located conveniently, then owners will store their bikes in places that are convenient to them, but may obstruct access or mar building finishes. 126 Bicycles are everywhere in the central campus. They are prized possessions that merit care and security, yet they sprawl across building entrances if there are too few conveniently located racks. Campus Furniture Design Guidelines Bollards Different designs of bollards are used to fulfill a number of functions: • To prevent vehicular access into pedestrian and bicycle areas, • To prevent pedestrian and bicycle access into hazardous places (with chain or cable linking them), • To provide low level lighting, typically to mark a pedestrian route, • To mark a separation between ownerships or use zones, • To provide hitching posts for equestrians. Design of bollards should be: • Tall enough to avoid being a tripping hazard to the sight-impaired, • Durable, self-finished material capable of withstanding blows from maneuvering vehicles, • In certain applications, removable in case of emergency, • Compatible with nearby architecture and campus furniture. Lighted and non-lighted bollards at the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. The location of bollards is generally dictated by their function. They should, however, be located so that they do not become unnecessary hazards – located where drivers parking vehicles cannot see them, or where they would impede opening of car doors, for example. 127 Poles Poles are used to support many different things, and have a tendency to multiply unless a concerted effort is made to the contrary. In some cases, a single pole can fulfill several different functions. In others, the need for a pole can be eliminated entirely – as in the case of burying overhead utilities. Poles should be located to: Poles are used to support: Signage See the University’s manual on signage. See also guidelines on poles, previous. • Street lights, • Banners, • Flags, • Hanging baskets, • Traffic signals, • Street names, • Direction signs, • Building names and other information, • Bus stops, • Special events. Design considerations applicable to poled include: • Minimize the number of poles used by multiple use of essential poles, and by removing redundant poles, • Be consistent in the design and finish of repetitively used poles, as for light fixtures, • Integrate signage with buildings and other structures rather than mounting them separately on poles, 128 • Minimize the likelihood of collision by vehicles, bicyclists and walkers, • Minimize visual clutter, • Contribute to a sense of continuity and consistency in design – as in the case of street light poles, for example. Traffic Controls Traffic signals and other controls are generally governed by the Federal Manual on Uniform Traffic Devices, and administered by the State, County, or the City of Davis, depending on the streets involved. Any traffic signals or other controls installed on campus streets should be coordinated through the City of Davis to ensure compatibility with the rest of the City. Campus Furniture Design Guidelines Fountains The sight and sound of water can be particularly pleasing in a hot, dry place; and there are such places on campus in the summer. Fountains are sometimes given to commemorate a person or event. They can enrich an environment, but can also be troublesome maintenance commitments. Careful consideration should be given to the last point before accepting a fountain on campus as a gift. Design considerations include: Special functions fulfilled by a fountain can include one or more of the following: Locate a fountain to be: • In a place of special and appropriate significance, • Clear of vehicular, bicycle and pedestrian flows, • Visible along walkways and from significant viewpoints on campus, • Near seating. • Provide a special point of interest or identity, • Enrich the immediate environment, • Serve as a local landmark to orient campus users, • Contribute to a sense of quality and artfulness in design of the campus, • Complement nearby architecture or other features. • Use only good quality and durable, waterproof materials, • Ensure convenient access to plumbing and other equipment associated with the fountain, • Be responsive to the scale of the place in which it is to be installed, • Consider places for informal seating on the structure, • Consider special illumination. 129 Drinking Fountains Outdoor drinking fountains can make a pleasing addition to a place where students typically assemble between classes. However, besides providing cool drinking water, it should also contribute aesthetically to its location. On a more modest scale, it can achieve some of the functions fulfilled by decorative fountains, outlined above. The design of outdoor drinking fountains should address: • Durable and sanitary construction – bronze, for example, • Bowl and jet to be accessible to everyone, • Fountain to be securely fastened to the ground, • Plumbing to be readily accessible for maintenance, • Jet to be aligned so that prevailing winds will not direct water out of the bowl. Locate outdoor drinking fountains to be: • Near populous pedestrian routes and intersections, • At special locations where a drinking fountain can contribute to the quality of the space. 130 Campus Furniture Design Guidelines Sculpture and Other Art Pieces The campus already benefits from a number of fine pieces that enrich and lend a special identity to the place. Care must be taken to ensure than any new objets d’art do not conflict with or compromise the existing pieces. Their relationship to the immediate landscape and nearby buildings is also important. In that respect, a piece that is commissioned for a particular location can respond to particular issues of scale, color and orientation. Readymade pieces may be more difficult to place satisfactorily. Siting criteria are, in other respects, similar to those given for fountains, above. Some art pieces are designed for a particular location and depend upon that place for their effect. Others are adaptable to a variety of possible locations. 131 Telephones Both emergency telephones and outdoor payphones tend to be standardized on the campus. As they are replaced over time, it is important to ensure that the following design features are incorporated: • Vandal-resistant hardware, including armored cable, and impact resistant handset, • Keypad accessible to both wheelchair users and standing users, • Internal illumination, • Weather resistant, • Will not accumulate trash, • Highly visible location by day and after dark, • Easily maintained and replaced. 132 Newspaper Dispensers Many communities have tried and failed to bring order to a multiplicity of newspaper dispensers, and have failed. Distributors have succeeded in invoking freedom of speech legislation to allow them great latitude in the design and location of boxes. However, on the campus and outside public rights of way, newspaper dispensers can be tamed somewhat. Some design and location considerations are: • Designate areas in which distributors can locate and secure their dispensers. These should be accessible to delivery vans, but clear of pedestrian crossings and other through ways. • Materials and finishes of dispensers must be consistent with the quality of the location, to the satisfaction of the campus architect, otherwise distributors will be asked to remove their property. A r c h i t e c t u r a l D e s i g n Guidelines Architectural Design Guidelines 2003 2003 Printed on recycled paper