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Monday, May 10, 2004 - Page updated at 12:00 A.M.
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MIT adds whimsical building

By Theo Emery
The Associated Press

BIZUAYEHU TESFAYE / AP
Massachusetts Institute of Technology officials sought an unconventional design for the Stata Center to help stir the school's famous broth of creativity in Cambridge, Mass. It was designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry, who designed the Experience Music Project in Seattle.
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CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — The Stata Center, the newest addition to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology campus, contains all the mysteries of a child's toy box: Open the top and a jumble of surprises tumble out.

Walls lean and tilt like stacked building blocks. Pop-eyed windows and cylindrical outcroppings appear ready to roll loose. Alice-in-Wonderland balconies and walkways look out over high-tech research labs and staircases seem suspended in air.

But the nearly $300 million building, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry and more than a decade in the planning, is as much for work as play. MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, or CSAIL, and other university departments moved in even as construction workers were adding the finishing touches.

University officials sought an unconventional design to help stir MIT's famous broth of creativity. At the same time, they wanted to attract top talent and banish MIT's reputation as a warren of dowdy buildings.

"We hope that it's going to be a building that will inspire people, make them think a little bit, and will frankly show a little bit of the audacity and fun we have at MIT, as well as the hard work we do," said MIT President Charles Vest.

Faculty have reacted to the building in ways uncharacteristic of MIT. CSAIL Director Rodney Brooks joked that "it's hard for a technologist to talk about it," but said researchers wanted to be in a place that makes the heart, not just the mind, soar.

"I view it as a place to inspire people to do their research, to feel comfortable, to have amenities, to be part of campus, to connect back to the undergraduates," he said.

The campus long known for its innovative engineering work has not kept pace with modernity, Vest said. Faculty and students have toiled for decades in turn-of-the-century Beaux Arts buildings and drab utilitarian offices and labs.

Master plan

About 15 years ago, school officials set out to change that with a master-building plan. They demolished the beloved, World War II-era Building 20, which housed the famous "rad lab" where radar was developed, to make room for the capstone project, the Stata Center.
 
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Gehry, whose designs include the Experience Music Project in Seattle and the acclaimed Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, said that even if critics believe the Stata Center is "a bit kooky," they'll find that it fits into the landscape of nearby MIT buildings.

"But it does take a step into another realm, of innovation, and a bit of a sense that it doesn't take itself so seriously, as some modernism does," he said. "It tends to have a sense of humor, and I think that is attractive these days — I hope so anyway."

The massive 700,000-square-foot building is named for Analog Devices founder Ray Stata and his wife, Maria, who donated $25 million. Two towers that encircle and rise above its central public areas are named for two other major donors: Microsoft founder Bill Gates ($20 million) and investor Alexander Dreyfoos Jr. ($15 million).

The towers house labs and research "neighborhoods" that straddle several floors, collectively called "the warehouse." Inside, a long arching corridor called "the student street" connects the towers, and provides access to classrooms, lecture halls, a child-care center, and a cafe. Above the student street is the "town-center" level, with a terrace, faculty dining and a pub.

Wired building

Not surprisingly, the building is wired to the hilt. Although MIT scaled back plans for interactive computing throughout the building — intended as part of an existing undertaking called the Oxygen Project — the center is full of technological surprises, such as the "holodeck" where researchers hope to create 3-D virtual environments, reminiscent of "Star Trek."

Natural light floods the building, and its toilets flush with collected rainwater.

Among the whimsical elements: "the nose," a rounded, silver-wrapped housing for a robotics lab; "the kiva," a bright yellow cylinder enclosing seminar space; and "pisa," a leaning building face.

Carol Burns, board member of the Boston Society of Architects and an adjunct MIT professor, said the building combines Gehry's talents in new ways. She said the building is "personally, not my cup of tea," but said it will likely be widely admired, as well as criticized.

"It represents for MIT a significant statement about their ambitions for the campus, and for buildings and spaces on the campus. I think that within the history of architecture, it's an important building," she said.

Originally intended to open more than a year ago, the center's construction was slowed by a decision to add two levels of parking under the building as well as other new elements, such as the child-care center.

Costs soared because of the additions, and because competitive bidding suffered with so many of Boston's contractors involved with the massive Big Dig highway project.

Linguistics graduate student Raj Singh, 27, said the Stata Center is "full of surprises.

"Nothing looks the way it should look," he said. "It's sort of like a chess game. The more you get into it, the more surprises you find."

Copyright © 2004 The Seattle Times Company

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