|
COVER
STORY
Architecturally
striking student center is growing in usage and popularity
By Jonathan Lemire '01
 |
| Related
Stories |
 |
|
|
No
one has ever claimed that evolution happens overnight.
Though
it is unlikely that Charles Darwin was referring to Ivy League student
centers when he published his landmark tract on the developmental
changes of flora and fauna in the mid-19th century, his basic principle
that evolution happens over a period of time can easily be applied
to Alfred Lerner Hall.
Architecturally
controversial when it opened in the fall of 1999, the campus's new
student center is steadily becoming more appreciated and widely
used. While there certainly have been growing pains, Lerner, through
the combined efforts of administrators and student groups and the
drawing power of events and restaurants, is clearly being transformed
into a true center for Columbia students.
"Though
it took a year, Lerner Hall is being used beyond belief by student
groups," Dean of Students Chris Colombo says. "It also
has become a real community center for its causal user: students
who use it to get food, check their mail and meet with friends."
"Lerner
has really grown on students," agrees student body president
Ariel Neuman '01. "Almost everyone I know is using it more
than before."
Lerner
Hall, of course, has the unenviable task of replacing a legend.
For generations of undergraduates, Ferris Booth Hall was the Morningside
Heights mecca for campus activities. However, by the early 1990s,
the Board of Trustees began to realize that Ferris Booth, beloved
as it was by alumni and students, was becoming outdated and downright
dilapitated, and needed to be either extensively renovated or replaced.
George Rupp's arrival as University President in 1993 ended that
debate.
"When
President Rupp came to Columbia," Vice President of Facilities
Management Mark Burstein says, "he made it clear that he wanted
to improve the undergraduate experience here and that construction
of a new student center would be part of making that happen. Ferris
Booth was designed in the 1950s, and was built for a very different
student population than Columbia has now: namely, for commuters.
We needed a new building to support our new type of students."
So
Ferris Booth went down in a heap of bricks and memories in the summer
of 1996, leaving Columbia without a student center for the first
time in four decades. Bernard Tschumi, dean of the School of Architecture,
was commissioned to design the new building; a primary donor, Alfred
Lerner '55, was recruited to help fund it; and hordes of construction
workers descended on campus to build it. And while some College
students went through most of their undergraduate careers without
a student center, Columbia's promise of a state-of-the-art structure
that would be twice the size of Ferris Booth soon began to rise
from the gaping hole in the ground adjacent to Carman Hall between
114th and 115th Streets on Broadway.

 |
Defined
architecturally by its ramps, increased usage has made Lerner
Hall a vibrant student center.
PHOTO: EILEEN BARROSO
 |
Though
Spectator editorials on the building's apparent lack of progress
would have had you believe otherwise, Lerner Hall opened on schedule
in September 1999; a gala ribbon-cutting ceremony was held a month
later, featuring an appearance by Art Garfunkel '62. The building
was a marvel to behold: a traditional brick facade facing Broadway,
combined with a sleek, ultra-modern glass wall overlooking campus,
all joined together by an extensive series of ramps and steel.
Architecture
critics raved. Students complained.
In
forms of communication that varied from campus-wide e-mails to informal
conversations, numerous students voiced their opinions that the
new center was too sterile, too confusing, and most importantly,
too empty. According to Harris Schwartz '59, a long-time administrator
and former dean of residence halls who is now executive director,
student services at Lerner Hall, the criticisms were not totally
unexpected.
"When
Lerner first opened, the building's construction was still being
finished off," notes Schwartz. "Students were beginning
to see the building and not really understand how it all came together
and could be used.
"For
a number of years, students existed in a nomadic, 'Ferris Booth-in
exile' state, so when this building opened there was no tradition
that carried over of using a student center. By definition, Lerner
came with a learning curve."
Part
of students' apprehension towards the new building was that even
when it opened, much of it was still closed. Though the ramps, the
student mailboxes and the ground-floor dining option, Cafe (212),
opened in the fall of 1999, a number of the building's marquis attractions,
including the Ferris Booth Commons restaurant and the theater portion
of the Roone Arledge Auditorium and Cinema, were still under construction.
"We
were committed to getting Lerner up and running as soon as possible,"
Schwartz says, "which led to some portions of the building
still being under construction while the Hall itself opened. But
once most of it opened, there was growing evidence that students
were becoming more comfortable with it and making much more use
of it."
The
numbers back him up. As of December 2000, Lerner was averaging 42,000
turnstile entries a day, up 65 percent from a year earlier. Its
ramps are more crowded, its lounges are filling up, and general
complaints about the building are dying down.
What
could bring about such a change of heart?
"It's
a building that's now really alive, and what made it come alive?
Food!" says Colombo with a laugh.
Lerner
Hall contains two distinct restaurants, both on the campus side
of the building. Cafe (212), located on the ground floor, specializes
in sandwiches, salads and breakfast foods, while Ferris Booth Commons,
located on the floor above (with additional seating another level
up), is a European-style market that offers everything from pizza
and pasta to sushi and stir-fry.
According
to Director of Dining Services Scott Wright, the two eateries -
which each average over 2,200 customers a day - are the two busiest
restaurants on campus, so popular that they have taken away a large
portion of the business of other campus dining locations.
"Cafe
(212) has exceeded all expectations," Wright says, "and
Ferris Booth Commons is doing almost as well. In fact, when we saw
how popular (212) was last year, we changed the design of Ferris
Booth in order to provide more seating for the overflow of customers."

 |
Students
regularly use Lerner for such daily tasks as checking mail.
PHOTO: EILEEN BARROSO
 |
Though
he cites the administration's long-standing belief that feeding
people in Lerner's restaurants would increase traffic in the building
as a whole, Bob Moskovitz, Columbia's executive director of business
services, still expresses surprise at just how well-received the
two locations have become.
"The
menu that is offered in Cafe (212) and Ferris Booth Commons was
created from a market research report done two years ago that revealed
that students wanted fresh, healthy choices that were prepared in
front of them," explains Moskovitz. "The menu at (212)
is based upon that of the Au Bon Pain chain, one of the most popular
among students according to our survey, while the one at Ferris
Booth fills in the gap of those foods that were desired but not
offered anywhere else on campus, like brick-oven pizza and especially
sushi."
The
new dining options have been big hits with students.
"I
really like both restaurants in Lerner," says Michael Rubin
'04. "They are more open and have better selection than any
other place on campus."
Though
perhaps not as popular as Cafe (212) - so crowded that it is scheduled
to undergo some renovations this summer to accommodate its constant
heavy traffic - business also is booming for the Columbia bookstore
in its new location, the basement of Lerner's Broadway side.
"The
bookstore's sales have increased to $9.8 million, an 11 percent
jump over last year," Moskovitz says. "Having it in Lerner
is great because it allows a student to go 'one-stop shopping' in
the building."
In
addition to the Barnes and Noble-run bookstore, four other business
locations exist in the new student center: Citibank adjacent to
(212), STA Travel on the first floor, Copy Express on the third
floor, and the Game and Pool Room at the top of the first set of
ramps. Despite their popularity, however, there are no current plans
to add any more retail to Lerner Hall.
"Dozens
of businesses want in," Moskovitz says, "but there's no
need now to add anything. We don't want to take away space from
students just to add some retail."
Indeed,
any attempt to take away space from students would probably be met
with great resistance since, in the building's biggest controversy
since the futuristic ramps were unveiled, Lerner is already dealing
with a meeting space shortage.
While
26.2 percent of the 225,000 square-foot student center is devoted
to meeting and activity space, questions remain as to whether the
allotted areas are adequate to meet the needs of the 2,389 student
events that were held in Lerner during the fall 2000 semester alone.
In addition, almost 700 non-student-affiliated events were held
in the building that semester, adding to the crunch.
Neuman,
while acknowledging that Lerner on the whole is a great resource
as a meeting space for student groups on campus, believes something
must be done to make Lerner's meeting rooms more accessible to students.
"Space
issues are definitely Lerner's biggest problem," he says. "At
the halfway point in a term, for instance, all the meeting space
will be booked for the rest of the semester. And, since there's
such an administrative push to get student groups to use Lerner,
other meeting places on campus have become much harder to reserve."

 |
Students
looging onto some of the many available computers.
PHOTO: EILEEN BARROSO
 |
Neuman's
suggestions for changes that would make Lerner more group-friendly
include keeping the building open 24 hours (currently, it closes
at midnight during the week and 3 a.m. on Saturdays) and devoting
much of the still-unfinished sixth floor to meeting space.
Though
asserting that "there is no budget, unfortunately, for keeping
Lerner open 24 hours," Schwartz says he shares some of the
students' concerns about meeting space and that some of the sixth
floor may be used to alleviate those concerns, though no official
plans have been approved.
"Lerner's
biggest weakness," he says, "is that there isn't enough
Lerner to go around. We could double the space inside and it still
wouldn't be enough for everyone."
In
an attempt to make sure that Lerner is booked "as fairly as
possible," according to Associate Director of Student Services
Dara Falco, a system of pre-calendaring has been instituted to ensure
that if groups know their space needs early, they will get the areas
in Lerner they request.
"About
40 percent of all events are booked in the pre- calendaring period,
which takes place the year before," Falco says. "The rest
are done on a first-come, first-served basis, and all scheduling
conflicts are mediated by the space and scheduling committee that
consists of both administrative and student representatives."
Despite
the occasional difficulty in getting space, there is no question
that Lerner is a valuable asset to student groups, according to
Marc Dunkelman '01, lead coordinator of the Columbia Political Union,
one of the many groups that calls the student center home. "It's
really given the CPU a place to reach out to the Columbia community
and the outside world of politics," he says.
This
concept of "Columbia community" lies at the heart of Lerner
Hall's mission, according to Colombo. "In addition to all of
its events," he notes, "one of Lerner's greatest strengths
is that it facilitates informal interactions between students every
day and builds a real sense of community here."
However,
the biggest component of this desired community, Columbia's student
body, is still divided as to whether Lerner has actually fostered
any of its much promised sense of school spirit. Andrew Pagano '01
doesn't feel that students were consulted enough in the building's
design.
"As
a commuter," he says, "I'm a little disappointed and upset
that there are no facilities for a commuters lounge here and that
there are no real attempts at integration. There should have been
some dialogue with students on issues."
According
to Jorge Herrera '01, president of the Columbia College Senior Class
Committee, however, students - despite some legitimate complaints
about the building - are by and large warming to it rapidly.
"Lerner
Hall has improved a lot in the two years it has been open,"
he says. "It's much more crowded and feels more like a location
students want to be in. It has a great future ahead of it, and it's
already showing it today."
About
the Author: Jonathan Lemire '01, having passed his swim test,
graduates this month with a double degree in history and sarcastic
Spectator sports columns.
 |
| Related
Stories |
 |
|
|
|