Southern Illinois University | Carbondale Campus
By:Adulsak "Otto" Chanyakorn
Before the fall
break, I had an opportunity to walk from Morris Library and cut through the
open space between Woody Hall and Pulliam Clock Tower. It was interesting to me
that the atmosphere of the open space with manmade landscape was beautiful
(Figure 1). I can see the harmony of the architectural language from Woody Hall
and Pulliam Clock Tower as they become unified. They relate and share some
certain characteristics. The designers of
those buildings were concerned about the overall environment of the campus. So,
they created the harmony of the campus as a whole. Moreover, the quality of the
materials used for the buildings were fine materials which defined the taste and
thoughtfulness of SIU’s campus in selecting architects They also were built
with high quality. One can see that there are a lot of buildings on SIU’s
campus that dedicate themselves to the unity of the campus and the overall
context, such as Wheeler Hall, Shryock Auditorium, Pulliam Hall, etc.
In contrast, some
campus buildings that were built after Word War II were poorly designed, out of
scale, and disharmonious to the overall campus atmosphere. They even created inappropriate
spaces or dead spaces that students tend to never use. Most architects who
designed the new buildings for the campus were trained in international
modernism. They expressed their own individual architectural signatures more
than being concerned about the unity of the campus as a whole. There is a
conflict between international modernism and the overall needs of the campus.
However, there are a lot of architects from modernism who designed the new
buildings at SIU with deep consideration. They were trying to produce new
architecture that speaks with the past and also expresses the moment of our
time. For the obvious example, I would like to mention Louis Kahn’s British Art
Center at Yale University (1977) (Figure 2). It respects the context. At the
same time, it expresses itself and carries the beauty of our time.
Southern
Illinois University at Carbondale is a beautiful campus. We should cultivate its
own beauty. We should not abandon our commitment to our campus by selecting quickly
and cheaply designed structures to be built on the campus. Even though we are
facing the difficult financial time, our decisions now will have deep impacts
on the future of our campus.
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