
A digital rendering of the Campus Center at
UMass-Boston with the proposed science building in
the background. Courtesy of UMass-Boston
By Pete Stidman
News Editor
Now that Gov. Deval Patrick has signed the $2.2
billion higher education bond bill - $125 million
of which will go for improvements at the
UMass-Boston campus - college administrators are
hot to trot to begin transforming the 70s-era
Columbia Point campus that is often referred to as
a 'fortress' or a 'prison.'
First on tap is the design and construction of a
new academic building, a 250,000 square foot
"integrated science complex," as well as a
stabilization of the campus's, leaky, crumbling
sub-structure, shut down in July 2006.
The substructure's imminent demise was somewhat
of a spark for the 25-year UMass-Boston Master Plan
that has been in development during Chancellor
Keith Motley's reign at the school, according to
Ellen O'Connor, vice-chancellor of administration
and finance.
The original estimate to repair the structure,
which includes a parking garage, was $160 million.
The other option was to bolster it to last another
10 years for $25 million, and then devise a plan to
do away with it. The school chose plan B, and will
put the stabilization project out to bid in the
fall. The structure would then come down within
those ten years in the first phase of the master
plan.
The new bond bill included $25 million for the
stabilization work, along with $100 million for the
new science building, which is expected to raise
the school's profile as a research center.
"It's really devoted to lab space in traditional
academic departments like chemistry, biology,
psychiatry, nursing, that need serious lab
experience," said O'Connor. "There are also many
multi-disciplinary academic pursuits that will use
the space."
The school designated Goody Clancy as the
architect for the new building, a Boston-based firm
that designed the Graduate Center at Simmons
College, the Yawkey Student Center at Emmanuel
College and several other edifices around the
state. Chan Krieger Sieniewicz, an esteemed local
urban design and architecture firm with extensive
waterfront experience across the country, is
consulting on the yet-to-be-completed master plan.
A new round of community meetings on that subject
is tentatively scheduled for the fall.
The new science building would be situated
between the schools most recent building, the
Campus Center, and the JFK Library & Museum,
putting a modern face on the campus's eastern side.
The design work, said O'Connor, is expected to be
complete by 2010, and the construction done by 2013
along with a second, general academic building due
to be funded by the state in 2009.
"Science buildings are extremely complicated and
challenging," said O'Connor. "They are the most
challenging to build which is why we decided to do
it first."
The two, 1000-bed dormitory buildings in the
draft master plan, which have raised some
controversy in surrounding neighborhoods, would
begin design and construction some five to 10 years
from now, said DeWayne Lehman, UMass spokesman.
"It may be that the order of things get
changed," Lehman warned of the draft master plan.
"We haven't built an academic building in 35 years,
so there's a real consensus that that needs to get
done, but other things could get moved around."
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