HomeMy WebLinkAboutNCRE Sketch Plan Submission 2018-05-04
Trowbridge Wolf Michaels Landscape Architects LLP
1001 West Seneca Street, Suite 201 Ithaca, New York 14850 ph: 607.277.1400
www.twm.la
May 4, 2018
JoAnn Cornish, Director of Planning and Development
Department of Planning and Development
City of Ithaca
108 East Green Street
Ithaca, NY 14850-5690
Susan Ritter, Director of Planning
Planning Department
Town of Ithaca
215 North Tioga Street
Ithaca, NY 14850
Brent Cross, Village Engineer
Village of Cayuga Heights
836 Hanshaw Road
Ithaca, NY 14850
RE: North Campus Residential Expansion (NCRE).
Dear JoAnn, Susan, Brent, and respective members of the planning boards:
Cornell University is planning the construction of new residence halls on North Campus. The proposed
buildings are located in both the Town and the City of Ithaca. A small portion of site work (primarily
sidewalks) is located in the Village of Cayuga Heights.
We would like to introduce the project with a sketch plan presentation to your respective planning boards on
May 15 (Town of Ithaca), May 22 (City of Ithaca) and May 29 (Village of Cayuga Heights).
Enclosed is a brief project description and project location map. Our design team will bring additional visual
materials to the meeting. If you have questions, or need additional information, please do not hesitate to
call.
Sincerely,
Kimberly Michaels
Principal
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Project Description
Project Purpose, Need & Benefit
Cornell is a residential university, and the first two years of the educational experience on campus are foundational
to students’ academic success, personal development and the ability to build a cohesive community. The additional
residence halls to be developed in the North Campus Residential Expansion will enable Cornell to provide more
intentional and consistent support during the most formative years of the student experience.
Cornell initiated a Housing Master Planning process in January 2016 to develop a near and long-term strategy for
undergraduate student housing that would optimize the University’s student housing portfolio, improve the student
experience, support the University’s academic mission and support the surrounding community’s goal of providing
affordable housing. During the planning process, multiple stakeholders were consulted including students, faculty,
staff, administrators, representatives from the Greek community, local residents and officials from the City and Town
of Ithaca, Village of Cayuga Heights and Tompkins County.
The Housing Master Plan demonstrated that Cornell’s greatest housing challenge is the lack of suitable inventory
to meet demand and accommodate students in appropriate living environments that meet their developmental and
programming needs. Campus housing is particularly problematic for undergraduate students, as fierce competition
for a limited number of beds has resulted in a lottery system that creates intense anxiety among first-year students
and sophomores and difficulty living in the same place on campus for more than one year.
Cornell also faces significant deferred maintenance in its residence halls and community buildings. The greatest
needs occur in some of the University’s most iconic, historic residence halls, including Balch Hall, Risley Hall and the
West Campus Gothics. The sheer number of students living off campus has created tremendous upward pressure
on rents in nearby neighborhoods, especially in the City of Ithaca, without a corresponding increase in the quality of
housing, exposing many students to unsafe living conditions and high market rents.
The proposed residence halls will allow the University to address multiple issues. Upon completion, the North
Campus Residential Expansion will give Cornell the ability to house 100% of its first-years in developmentally
appropriate campus housing and 100% of its sophomores in campus residence halls, co-ops, and Greek housing.
By adding 2,000 beds and a dining facility on North Campus by August of 2022, the North Campus Residential
Expansion (NCRE) will address a significant deficit of on-campus housing for Cornell students, as well as
accommodate an anticipated increase in enrollment.
Project Program
North Campus will be home to first-year and sophomore sites that provide individual identities for each class year but
promote interaction through new dining, recreation, and open space. Cornell will utilize approximately 800 of the new
beds for sophomore students and 1,200 for first-year students.
First-year students will continue to be housed on North Campus as established by the North Campus Residential
Initiative of 2001, but Cornell now will have capacity to house all of them in developmentally-appropriate housing that
focuses on a common first-year experience and building community.
This project also will provide more sophomore students with the option to remain on North Campus, creating greater
continuity in their student experience. Cornell is enthusiastic about the opportunity to provide an environment which
fosters more mentorship and interaction between first-year and second-year students outside the classroom,
and believes that the introduction of new residential options will enhance the success of other program-specific
residential environments, such as the West Campus House System.
The project will be developed on two sites on North Campus. The first is the CC parking lot – a 386-space parking lot
located along Jessup Road across from Jessup Fields. The second will be on a portion of the recreational fields that
are north of Appel Commons (one of Cornell’s Community Centers).
The CC parking lot will become student housing for sophomores. This site will host approximately 800 new student
beds, a 1,200-seat dining hall and central student lounge/social spaces. The new dining facility will replace the
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Robert Purcell Marketplace Eatery in the Robert Purcell Community Center (RPCC). RPCC will continue to serve
as a community and conference center for North Campus. A new recreation space is also being explored as an
integrated element in one of the sophomore buildings.
The recreation fields north of Appel Commons will become an expanded first-year living community. This site will
include approximately 1,200 new student beds and outdoor recreation amenities. The North Star Dining Room in
Appel Commons will continue to serve students on North Campus.
Consistent with Cornell’s other residence halls, each new building will have a Residence Hall Director (RHD) who
is a live-in, professional staff member. The RHD provides community and program development, administrative
management, and support for his/her residence hall. All new buildings also will have Faculty Fellows who spend time
interacting with students, sharing meals, and attending programs with residents.
Additionally, the new first-year student buildings will each have a Faculty-in-Residence who also lives in the building.
This role helps create a shared experience and supportive environment that fosters academic and intellectual
learning and personal development.
Through creative floor plans, Cornell strives to provide residence halls that enhance the residential experience, and
encourage interaction and collaboration among students. The buildings aim to draw students out of their rooms and
into ample common areas in support of group study, social interaction, and group programs in spacious lounges
and nearby cafés. Seminar/classroom style rooms also will be incorporated to facilitate Learning Where You Live
courses.
Project Architecture & Landscape Character
The buildings will be between three and five stories using a modern aesthetic that pulls from and expands on the
admirable qualities of many of the existing buildings on the North Campus. Articulated facades, durable quality
materials and social uses on the ground floor will be important features of new residence halls, utilizing innovative
design to meet the needs of future undergraduates and creating a platform for engaging community interactions.
Abundant social spaces such living rooms, lounges, study rooms, wellness rooms, multi-purpose rooms and
communal kitchens are dominant on the ground floor. Lounges and study rooms are also included on each floor
of residential living. A generous amount of glass is intended to be used wherever there are social spaces, creating
a strong visual relationship with the exterior environment and bringing light into the living spaces. Loggias at the
ground level are proposed for buildings on both sites, creating opportunities for interior activities to spill out into the
landscape.
With respect to the landscape surrounding the buildings, site planning strategies reflect the important role of open
space on the Cornell campus. A hierarchy of memorable open spaces are being developed that are green, flexible,
accessible, and interconnected and that enhance social functions. Large open lawns are planned that are suitable
for passive recreation as well as for staging events and possible tent set-up. These flexible open lawns are planned
near ground floor social spaces. Groves of large shade trees and flowering understory trees are planned where
residential living units extend to the ground floor. The vegetation is planned to create a greater sense of privacy while
still allowing filtered light and views for security. Outdoor plazas and furnishings will accommodate a range of uses
from group activities to individual study.
Creative handling of stormwater is envisioned in order to celebrate and make visible the university’s commitment
to green infrastructure. Terraced stormwater planters are envisioned as features adjacent to primary walkways. Site
circulation and grading will optimize accessibility and connectivity across North Campus.
The site for first-year student housing includes an outdoor amphitheater suited for staged dramatic productions,
performances and informal gatherings. The amphitheater is adjacent to a cafe on the ground floor with at-grade
access to the stage area. The first-year student site also includes a multi-purpose field and one basketball court
adjacent to the residence halls. The four existing tennis courts will remain.
Project Description
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At both sites, parking facilities sufficient to service ADA requirements, residence hall live-in staff and maintenance/
delivery access will be provided. Site lighting will be thoughtfully integrated with the rest of the site with LED fixtures
that include cutoffs to focus lighting in needed areas and minimize light spillover onto adjacent areas.
For orientation, attached please find a diagram that overlays the proposed building footprints on an aerial
photograph of North Campus.
Project Description
File: T:\PROJECTS\Cornell University Undergrad Student Housing\ACAD\LIDAR\TWMLA BASE_LiDAR_LEAF Boundaries.dwgPlot Date: 3/28/2018L201
LAYOUT PLAN5
Project Location Map
Proposed
Sophomore
Housing
Proposed
First-year
Housing
Jessup Rd
Cradit Farm Dr Pleasan
t
Grove
RdTr
iphamme
r
Rd
Carol Tatkon
Center
Helen Newman Hall
Appel
Commons
Mews Hall
Mary Donlon
Hall
Clara Dickson
Hall
Balch Hall
Court Hall
Kay Hall
Bauer Hall
Robert
Purcell
Community
Center
George
Jameson
Hall
Akwe:kon
Delta Gamma
Kappa Delta
Townhouse Community
Hasbrouck
Apartments
HR5
LR6
LR7
LR8
LR9
LR10
Jerome Holland
International Living
Center
Jessup Field
Tobin Field
House
Wait Terrace
VILLAGE OF CAYUGA HEIGHTS
TOWN OF ITHACACITY OF ITHACACITY OF ITHACA
Wa
i
t
A
v
e
Fuertes Observatory