Room for more books is not the only motive pushing the University to undertake the $57.5-million project, however. The new library will exist as a stunning bridge and critical resource in the implementation of Colgate's strategic plan: to create a place that brings together all of the resources that Colgate students and faculty need to energize their thinking and to produce path-breaking work.
Colgate’s Case Library has been renovated before. Originally built in 1958, the architecture reflected that of a warehouse, confirming the notion that a library was merely a storage place for books. Thus, during the early 1980s Colgate funded a 30,000-sf addition and a 45,000-sf renovation to the building. The existing building was hidden behind the addition, forming a new stone and brick façade more fitting to the existing Georgian and Victorian architecture. The Dana addition and renovation then posed a challenge as both builders and architects had to deal with virtually “two” buildings in the recent renovation: that of the first library, and then the addition and renovation that enclosed it.
The new Case Library acts as a culmination of these past libraries, combining the idea that a library is a place to store books, with the aesthetic appeal of a design that fits with the rest of Colgate’s campus. Located on levels 2 through 4 is the LASR system, which provides an innovative solution to long-term housing of books with the maximum in storage space. A computer controlled forklift is able to access bins of stored material in a 30 feet high by 115 feet long vault that will hold about 500,000 books. Students and faculty can order a book electronically and receive that book from the circulation desk within minutes. The most commonly requested books will be kept on regular shelves for browsing; older materials will be placed in the robotic retrieval system. The new Case Library goes a step further than these past libraries however, meeting the growing demands for an integrated facility offering an environment where the “new liberal arts skills will be honed.”
Both a real and symbolic bridge, the library will rise from the banks of Taylor Lake to the slope of Alumni Road, connecting the upper and lower campuses. A south entrance on the fifth floor will provided students access from the upper campus. The fifth floor will also house the 24-hour café, flexible workrooms, two classrooms, a large reading room, and the video conference center. The penthouse spaces above the fifth floor will house the mechanical systems.
Floors one through four follow a similar plan, modeled around two “main streets” and two “side streets” that form the basis of their footprints. Floor one will house government documents, audio visual studios, and a conservation lab among other things. Floor two is dominated by a rare book reading room and archive but also houses faculty carrels, Library of Congress collections, and multimedia production rooms. An enlarged West entrance and a new East entrance will give students and faculty outdoor access to the third and main floors. Highlights on the main floor include the circulation desk, inter-library services, reference, Information Technology Services, library administrative offices, and the Blackmore Archive of Recorded Sound. IT offices, periodicals, and technical services are located on level four.
| Project Information | ||||||||
| Building Owner: | Colgate University | |||||||
| Building Location: | Hamilton, New York UNITED STATES | |||||||
| Project Type: | Expansion,Renovation | |||||||
| Principal Building Function: | Library and IT center | |||||||
| Project Delivery Method: | Construction Management | |||||||
| Project Timeline |
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| Project Cost: | $60,400,000 | |||||||
| Cost Per Sq. Ft: | $380 | |||||||
| About These Cost Figures | ||||||||
| Building Information | ||||||||
| Project Includes: |
Education Library |
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| Total GSF: | 155,000 | |||||||
| Project Team | ||||||||
| Architect | Kendall/Heaton Associates Inc. | |||||||
| Architect | Shepley Bulfinch | |||||||
| Builder | Gilbane Building Company | |||||||
| Building Envelope Systems | French Engineering | |||||||
| Consultant - Graphics | Douglas Group | |||||||
| Consultant - Telecommunications | Vantage Technology | |||||||
| Engineer - Geotechnical | John P. Stopen Engineering Partnership | |||||||
| Engineer - Mechanical | Ove Arup and Partners | |||||||
| Engineer - Structural | Thornton-Tomasetti Engineers | |||||||
| Site Engineer | Klepper Hahn Hyatt | |||||||
| Supplier - Air Handlers | Trane Company | |||||||
| Supplier - Automated Storage/Retrieval System | HK Systems | |||||||
| Supplier - Building Automation Controls | Andover Controls | |||||||
| Supplier - Elevators | Thyssen Krupp | |||||||
| Profile Created 12/05/2007 | ||||||||
| Last Updated 12/31/2007 | ||||||||
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Copyright 2008 Tradeline Inc.
All Rights Reserved
ISSN: 1096-4894
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