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Designed
for Science
As
the University's science initiative gains momentum, barriers between
departments and disciplines are crumbling. The newest addition to
the Science Hill complex is custom-made to accommodate a changing
academic environment.
May
2002
by Bruce Fellman
Yale
is wasting no time making good on President Richard Levin's commitment
to enhance the sciences at the University.
Slightly over two years ago, on January 20, 2000, he announced
that Yale was dedicating a whopping $500 million to new facilities
in science and engineering. The engineering component has been marked
over the past year by a flurry of high-level hires (see Apr.),
and the sciences are now the beneficiary of a path-breaking new
building. Dedicated on October 26, the Class of 1954 Environmental
Science Center (ESC),
at the foot of Science
Hill, provides a very physical taste of targeted academic enterprise.
The best
work in the environmental
sciences, said Levin in his speech at the dedication, is "inevitably
and increasingly collaborative." The ESC, which represents the completion
of the first phase of what is expected to be a 20-year-long building
campaign in the Science Hill neighborhood, is a facility specifically
designed to help collaborations happen. But as people toured the
facility -- and admired such touches as fossil-bearing limestone
wall accents, the surprisingly bright corridors illuminated by skylights,
natural history mosaics in the terrazzo floors, and a ferocious
dinosaur skeleton suspended in the stair tower -- they may not have
been aware that the ESC is also the solution to a very old problem:
the overstuffed (and underutilized) Peabody
Museum of Natural History.
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The
Peabody houses a priceless archive of the world's biological
and physical diversity.
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When biologist
Alison Richard became the Peabody's
director in 1991, she inherited a sprawling collection of insects,
birds, dinosaur bones, Indian artifacts, animals in formaldehyde,
rocks, and pressed plants -- more than 12 million specimens in all.
The Peabody houses a priceless archive of the world's biological
and physical diversity, and collectors and donors continue to add
new material to the trove. "A museum is never done," says Richard,
who is now the University's provost.
But
a good museum quickly runs out of room. "The current building
opened its doors in 1925, and from the word go, it needed more space,"
Richard says. Indeed, the Peabody's annual report that year noted
that, "while the new building is highly satisfactory, it is already
filled." Expansion, said then-director Richard Swann Lull, was "sorely
needed."
But for
a number of reasons ranging from philosophical to financial, that
need, and a number of others which only became apparent much later,
wouldn't be met until this past February, when the ESC formally
opened for business. The $42-million building, designed by David
M. Schwarz '74MArch, is a three-story, 98,000-square-foot facility
that fronts Sachem Street and occupies the footprint of Bingham
Laboratories, which were razed for the new construction. Project
architect Brian O'Looney '90, from David M. Schwarz Architectural
Services, of Washington, D.C., along with Yale facilities managers
Kemel Dawkins, Tom Draeger, and Kari Nordstrom, and University Planner
Pamela Delphenich, oversaw the day-to-day building of the ESC by
Linbeck Construction,
a Texas-based firm.
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The
ESC has features that allude to neighboring buildings and
to the rhythms of Yale's neo-Gothic architecture.
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The ESC,
which is connected by walkways and corridors to both the Peabody
and the Kline Geology Laboratory (KGL), has features that allude
to neighboring buildings and to the rhythms of Yale's neo-Gothic
architecture, notes Schwarz. "We wanted it to reflect the spirit
and feel of Yale," says Schwarz, "and to help integrate Science
Hill back into the main campus."
The forms
of the windows hark back to those of the vintage buildings designed
by James Gamble Rogers, as well as to Philip Johnson's 1964 Kline
Biology Tower. The castle-like turret on the south end of the
ESC is a play on Osborn Memorial Laboratories. And the variegated
brickwork recalls that of the Peabody and KGL.
About
half of the ESC will be used by the Peabody, chiefly to better house
and conserve many of its collections and make them more accessible
to scholars and students. In addition, the facility will provide
office, laboratory, and classroom space for the departments of ecology
and evolutionary biology, geology
and geophysics, and anthropology,
as well as the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies (FES)
and the Yale Institute for Biospheric Studies (YIBS).
Major
funding for the new facility came from the Class of 1954, which
designated $25 million for the building from the historic $70 million
Tercentennial gift it made to Yale last year (see
"Giving and Getting," Feb. 2001); the Class has also earmarked
$25 million for a chemistry research building that is expected to
open in four years. Three additional facilities -- one for FES,
one for engineering, and one for molecular,
cellular, and developmental biology -- are in the planning stages
as part of the President's Science Hill upgrade.
Alison
Richard, who has played a leading role in the ESC project for the
past ten years, explains that there was nothing ad hoc about its
mix of tenants. "The facility was conceived, planned, and built
as a fundamentally interdisciplinary facility," says Richard, the
Franklin Muzzy Crosby Professor of the Human Environment and one
of the world's experts on lemurs,
a group of primates found primarily in Madagascar.
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At
the heart of the ESC is $3.5 million worth of custom-designed
cabinets.
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At the
heart of the ESC is something few people will ever actually see:
$3.5 million worth of custom-designed cabinets. There are more than
2,000 of them, and into these will go, when all the moving is done
in about two years, the Peabody's collections in vertebrate and
invertebrate zoology, invertebrate paleontology, botany, paleobotany,
and entomology. (Other material will either remain in the museum
or be moved to a nearby storage area.)
During
a recent behind-the-scenes tour, Tim White, the senior collections
manager for invertebrate paleontology, discussed some of the features
that he and Delta Designs, of Topeka, Kansas, incorporated into
each metal box, most of which are four or five feet tall, four feet
wide, and 30 inches deep."Specimens such as fossil plants and invertebrates
can be heavy, so we got very sturdy drawers with special Teflon-painted
drawer glides that make them easier to handle," says White.
The cabinet
units, which generally are stacked in pairs nine feet high, sit
on reinforced concrete floors supported by massive steel girders
and engineered to withstand loads of 350 pounds per square foot.
(A more typical load in an office building would be 100 pounds per
square foot.) The cabinets also are attached to chain-driven tracks
on the floor and can be moved easily by turning a hand crank.
The well-organized
set-up is a far cry from the haphazard situation that has too often
been the collection manager's lot. "For most people involved with
our collections, this new arrangement is like going from hell to
heaven," says White.
However,
before any material -- anything from preserved dragonflies and dried
grasses to field notes and specialized library books -- can be moved
into the ESC, it has to undergo a four- to five-day stint at sub-zero
temperatures in a Peabody freezer. "We want to start with a fresh
slate," says White. "This means killing any lurking bugs that can
eat specimens and then practicing what we call 'integrated pest
management' to keep the collections areas as pest-free as possible."
In the
past, insects have been controlled through the use of pesticides,
moth balls in particular, but concerns about their effects on the
health of the humans who use the collections have prompted museums
to attempt to phase out chemicals. Besides the freezing treatment
to avoid importing pests, the ESC will isolate the collections --
the "people" area and the collections area are separate parts of
the building -- and use the facility's sophisticated air-handling
and climate-control systems to create temperature and humidity conditions
that are not conducive to insect life.
Keeping
things cool and dry is also critical to preserving the material.
The fact that various environmental factors couldn't be controlled
with any kind of precision in some of the Peabody's storage areas
was leading, says Richard, to disaster.
"Early
in my tenure as museum director, I saw first-hand the deterioration
of many of the specimens,"
she says. "Here we had this superb record of the history of life,
and right in front of our eyes, rocks and fossils were disintegrating
and turning to dust."
At the
time, conservationist and philanthropist Edward Bass '67 had recently
given the University $20 million to bolster its work in environmental
science. One result of his gift was the creation of the Yale
Institute for Biospheric Studies, an interdisciplinary endeavor
designed to recruit faculty, train students, and fund research in
a variety of environmental areas.
As YIBS
was being developed, then-Peabody director Richard, FES dean John
Gordon, and YIBS director Leo Buss joined forces to propose that
the Bingham Lab be refurbished to become an environmental science
center. The group also suggested that Yale could build a "shed"
on the Bingham parking lot to house some of the Peabody's collections.
"Doing
nothing was unacceptable," says Richard.
Still,
the proposals sound preposterous today. Bingham Labs, although built
in 1959, was then at the end of its useful life, and as for the
shed, well, those were desperate days marked by steep deficits in
the University budget and a prohibition on new buildings (a shed
didn't count).
Bass,
who served on the University's Peabody committee, was well aware
of the dilemma and instead proposed using half his gift as seed
money for a more ambitious facility. As Yale's financial position
improved, and the ban on new construction was lifted, the "germ
of an idea," says Richard, began to evolve into the ESC.
One key
principle that guided the creators of the building was greater access
to the collection. "It's an enormous resource that the University
goes to great expense to maintain, but because of infrastructure
obstacles, it wasn't getting used enough," says Richard
Burger, the Peabody's director since 1994 and a "co-conspirator"
on the ESC project since its inception.
The fact
that specimens will soon be easy to find and retrieve will help
make the Peabody more of a participant in Yale's research agenda,
says Burger, a professor of anthropology specializing in Peru. In
addition, recently developed technologies in such areas as molecular
biology, population genetics, and isotope analysis (laboratories
for investigating these subjects are included in the building) are
making it possible to ask new questions about the Peabody's holdings
and about the natural world in general. "We've deliberately brought
together people interested in studying the environment from a variety
of complementary perspectives," says Burger. "We're building a community,
and we hope this will stimulate new kinds of interactions."
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"Researchers
will always be running into each other, and they'll be right
across the hall from the collections."
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Michael
Donoghue, the chairman of the department of ecology and evolutionary
biology (EEB),
is especially excited about the prospects. "On the first floor,
EEB ecologists will have offices and labs in close proximity to
theircolleagues in forestry," says Donoghue, who holds a professorship
named in honor of the late G. Evelyn Hutchinson, a Yale biologist
credited with being one of the founders of ecology.
"The way the building is set up, researchers will always be running
into each other, and they'll be right across the hall from the collections."
The EEB
chair and his colleagues interested in systematics and evolutionary
history will be on the third floor in close proximity to each other
and to the specimens they study. Donoghue investigates plants and
new schemes in taxonomy, and he
already has ongoing collaborations with Jacques Gauthier and other
geologists who will occupy the second floor of ESC. "There are many
researchers in the environmental area who already know they want
to work together," he says. "The physical arrangement of this building
will make it easy to happen."
The ESC
is also designed to better integrate the Peabody with undergraduate
education. "When we teach environmental science courses, we can
easily bring material in from the collections for students to use
in the building's labs," says Donoghue. "And we can also make a
very underutilized resource -- the collections managers -- a part
of our teaching efforts."
Provost
Richard, whose academic office is in the south turret, is particularly
pleased to see the building come to life. "This is a dream come
true," she explains, "and a sign that after a brief interlude, Yale
is reasserting its leadership and historic concern for education
and research about the natural world."
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