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Harkness
renovations heralded
High-speed
Internet access, other amenities bring aging dormitory up to
snuff.
A
$20 million renovation of E.S. Harkness Hall has brought new
plumbing, heating and electrical wiring to the aging dormitory
as well as such amenities as high-speed Internet access and lounges
with modern kitchenettes. The renovations are the 11-story buildings
first major overhaul since its construction in 1955 as a residence
for students in the health professions.
The
improvements complete a process that began in 1995, when the
School of Medicine took over management of medical school housing
and dining services from the University Graduate Housing Office
and the Yale University Dining Services. Changes to the buildings
aging infrastructureplumbing was built with World War II
scrap metal that became brittleinclude not only repairs,
but a new conduit for telephone lines, cable television and computer
cables. Also, dormitory rooms on the third floor gave way to
space for an expanded office of education, as well as other offices
dealing with student issues, such as student research, the M.D./Ph.D.
Program, international health and multicultural affairs. The
renovations provided a single destination for students for handling
their educational and support needs. The building was worn
out, said Eric Schonewald, associate director of resident
life at the medical school. Technology had accelerated
to the point where we needed to upgrade, and the old housing
was a turnoff to prospective students.
Work
started in the mid-1990s with the construction of Marigolds,
a new cafeteria and dining area that opened in 1997 with a broader
choice of meals and expanded hours. A facelift of the buildings
exterior followed, including the replacement of more than 250
windows and frames, and starting in June 1999, floor-by-floor
renovations brought the building into compliance with modern
fire, safety and handicapped-access codes. As floors were
completed we moved the students up one level and leapfrogged
up through the building, Schonewald said, adding that the
School of Medicines Office of Project Management and Construction
oversaw the work. They had to plan a renovation around
an occupied building.
That
was the greatest challenge: People were living in the building,
said Peggy Rubens-Duhl, project architect with Svigals Associates,
the firm that designed the renovated space. The architects consulted
with students to design more efficient rooms with more conveniently
placed electrical and data outlets and new wardrobes and sinks
that took up less space. Doorways were recessed to give each
room the appearance of a private entrance. We know that
the students are working in medical facilities, which tend to
be sterile, so we wanted it to be like a home, said Rubens-Duhl.
Two
rooms on alternating floors were sacrificed to create new lounges,
the buildings first common spaces on the residential floors.
Four of the eight residential floors have kitchenettes built
off of the lounge areas, two floors have lounges with televisions
and two floors have quiet study areas.
Rooms,
each averaging about 15 feet by 10 feet, are equipped with a
sink, a closet, a chest of drawers, a single bed and a desk.
The
dormitory keeps about 12 of its 180 rooms available for visitors,
such as medical school applicants. Although a number of rooms
were kept vacant during renovations, Schonewald expects the building
to be full in the next academic year. We have created a
living space that is competitive with any dormitory at Yale,
and we are offering a product that welcomes our first-year students,
said Schonewald.
John
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Benefit
for the hungry and homeless raises $25,000
New
Havens mayor, deans Merson and Chase take bids at eighth
annual auction.
The
eighth annual Hunger and Homelessness Auction achieved a number
of firsts in November as it raised more than $25,000 for New
Haven charities. For the first time, organizers recruited an
auctioneer from outside the medical schoolNew Haven Mayor
John DeStefano Jr. The auction had its own Web site, and it expanded
from a one-day to a four-day event, including two days of bidding.
We
wanted to create awareness, Miriam Parsa, a public health
student and one of five auction coordinators, said of the expanded
schedule. Over the course of the four days activities included
a canned-food drive sponsored by the Tercentennial committee
at the School of Public Health, the screening of a movie on homelessness,
a fast involving approximately 40 medical and public health students,
and silent and live auctions offering 234 items and services.
Bidding on the silent auction began the day before the live auction.
On the block were 12 hours of babysitting, editing
for two major papers by Yale English Lit. degree holder
and lessons in everything from piano to rock climbing to figure
skating.
Coordinators
also had practical reasons for spreading the bidding over two
days. We figured it would be a more efficient way of collecting
the money, said Parsa. As a result, said medical student
Matt Kronman, the coordinators had $15,000 in hand the day of
the live auction.
DeStefano
solicited bids on the first item, a plane ride over New Haven
piloted by Fred S. Kantor, M.D., HS 60, the Paul B. Beeson
Professor of Medicine. You can go over the suburbs, too,
if you really want to, DeStefano said. The flight went
for $200.
This
year also marked the auctioneering debuts of public health Dean
Michael H. Merson, M.D., and Herbert S. Chase Jr., M.D., deputy
dean for education. What could be more romantic than a
July weekend on Marthas Vineyard for two? Merson
asked, while soliciting bids on the getaway home of Frederick
J. Sigworth, Ph.D., professor of cellular and molecular physiology.
A question from the audience brought laughter: Is this
a romantic weekend with Dr. Sigworth?
Proceeds
went to the Cook and Care Walk-A-Thon, Community Soup Kitchen,
New Haven Home Recovery, Loaves and Fishes, and Douglas House.
John
Curtis |