Clark Pans “Measles,” Celebrates Pizazz
by Paul Bass | August 31, 2009 2:46 PM | Permalink | Comments (11)
When Frances “Bitsie” Clark surveys New Haven’s transformed landscape, one new school makes her think of skin disease. Another makes her break out in song.
Clark, who represents downtown on the Board of Aldermen and ran the arts council for 19 years, is enthusiastic overall about the bustle in New Haven these days. She agreed to lead a tour of her favorite three new or renovated buildings in town — as well as her three least favorite.
She had plenty to choose from. In the midst of a recession, New Haven is spawning new facades practically by the week, from public schools to Yale buildings to downtown offices and apartments and medical centers. (Click here to follow a similar tour preservationist Anstress Farwell offered two weeks ago; feel free to offer your own thoughts in the comments section below or suggest other tour leaders.)
Thumbs Up: Co-op
Clark started her tour on Crown Street, where the indefatigable 77-year-old alderwoman oohed and ahhed at at the new Cooperative Arts & Humanities High School as though beholding it for the first time (pictured at the top of the story). As a lifetime arts promoter, she thrills to the state-of-the-art rehearsal and performance spaces inside, which are meant not just for the magnet school’s students but for the community too.
She also marveled at architect Cesar Pelli’s design, from the orange-tinged brick to the studio glass that lets you see right into dance rehearsals above the entrance.
What excited Clark most about the new school could be found inside: a 350-seat theater. It reminded her of a similar theater Pelli designed at her alma mater, Vassar. She compared Co-op’s hall, with its balconies and proscenium arch-framed stage and flyspace, to “little jewel-like opera houses in Europe.”
The stage makes you want to break out in song, Clark said. Then she obliged, with a bar from “Hello, Dolly.” (Join her onstage in the video at the top of the story.)
1 Thumb Down (Another Up): Smilow
Clark couldn’t bring herself to place thumbs completely down on any one project. Asking her to trash a New Haven endeavor is like asking Willie Mays to strike out or catch fly balls with his glove turned upward instead of basket-style; it’s not in her nature. A good sport, Clark agreed to include three pans along with three praises in her tour. But she added “provisional” to her thumbs-down selections — or, in the case of the Smilow Cancer Hospital rising on Park Street, a philosophical thumbs up along with the architectural thumbs down.
“Great things are going to happen in this cancer center. It’s wonderful that we have it here. Its wonderful for our population. It’s wonderful for the world. We’re going to become world famous in New Haven because of Smilow,” Clark began as she narrated her way up South Frontage Road.
A “but” was coming.
“It ought to be a place that looks uplifting,” she continued. “But look at these colors!”
“It doesn’t have any style or class architecturally. Maybe it’s not supposed to … But you want it to be something that when you look at it you say, ‘Oh gosh. This is beautiful! It makes me feel good to look at it.’ Look at it! It’s very prosaic. It’s gray and brown. It isn’t uplifting…”
(Click here for a different take on Smilow.)
Clark enjoys the Rubik’s Cube-like related building next door, the six-story new clinical lab building at 55 Park St. It has color, fun, imagination, she said.
Meanwhile, she said, pointing back to Smilow, the cancer hospital has … bars.
“What are they? It could be a prison. Look at the bars on the windows! It’s overbearing.”
Clark regained her more diplomatic, upbeat bearings. “Great things are going to happen in this building. Great things,” she said. “Too bad it isn’t magnificently beautiful on the inside.”
Thumbs Up: The Study At Yale
Clark was bubbling again as she walked up to Chapel Street, where she met up with her favorite pair of glasses.
They’re big glasses. Metal glasses. Frames, actually, with no glass.
They’re a sculpture at the entrance to The Study at Yale, the swanky reincarnation of the old Colony Inn.
While the whole “study” shtick is a bit “hokey” or “silly-billy,” Clark said, the renovators obviously had a great time recreating the hotel, and did it with “class” and playfulness.
Clark beheld the glasses and and pretended to be a visitor to The Study. “Well, I finished studying for the night, I’ll put my glasses down” and head for a drink in the hotel restaurant, she riffed. Then she exclaimed about the glass-fronted sunny sitting room extending over the sidewalk; through the window people could be seen picking books from the shelves and lounging on leather chairs.
She even loves the doormen’s polo shirts, Clark said.
Just then, as if on cue, one of those doormen called to her. He invited her inside for a visit — and a complimentary glass of champagne.
Inside, six bubbly-filled cocktail glasses awaited. But Clark was distracted by the calm vibe inside the sitting room. “This,” she said, “is high-class Starbucks-type stuff.”
Down the hall she walked to “The Heirloom,” the understated hotel restaurant also overlooking Chapel. Clark pointed out the small track lights. The tasteful black-and-beige decor. The wine rack. “It’s not full of chotchkes,” she noted. She pronounced it all very “New York.” It was a compliment.
Thumbs Sideways: Metropolitan Business Academy
Clark had trouble mustering any kind of compliment for the $41 million, 78,000 square-foot school nearing completion on Water Street.
She steered her 1999 Saab there because it ranks as one of the three bottom choices on her “least favorite” list.
Instead of pointing her thumb down, she turned it sideways. Just in case. She called it a “provisional thumbs down.”
“I’d like to reserve my judgment; maybe it will be grand” when all the exterior is placed on the building before its scheduled January opening, Clark said.
The oddly put-together shapes of the design already sit wrong with her. So does the “pockmarked look.”
She glanced at a portion (lower left in the photo) that does have its final skin.
“Look at this,” she said. “It looks like it has the measles!” That was not a compliment.
A&A: Up. New Colleges: Down
Clark included two new Yale building projects on her list. One she adores for restoring the past. The other she dislikes for trying to imitate the past rather than break new ground.
The Art & Architecture building at Chapel and York broke new ground when Paul Rudolph designed it in the early 1960s. Critics found the asymmetrical, concrete tower cold and unpleasant. Clark toured it at its birth — and loved it for its boldness and creativity, the details built into the exterior, such as the lines etched into the concrete and the “measuring stick” on the Chapel side. Clark lamented when the “constant gripes” led to modifications of the design.
Now the place has been scrubbed, restored — and, in addition to a new wing on the grave of the old Gentree’s building on York, returned to its original design, Clark said.
Architect Robert Stern sought to return to Yale roots when he designed two new residential colleges across from Ingalls Rink, on Prospect Street, Sachem, Mansfield, and Prospect Place. In this case, Clark begged to differ with the strategy.
She agreed with Yale’s choice of where to build. Unlike some preservationists and environmentalists in town, she doesn’t mind that Yale will tear down a slew of buildings (like those pictured) to make way for the two new colleges. “None of this stuff looks that great to me. I don’t feel nostalgic about it,” she said of the Seeley Mudd library, the School of Management classrooms, and other edifices targeted for demolition.
But she felt “disappointed,” “let down,” this spring when Yale displayed a model of Stern’s design (pictured; click here for more views). She saw an attempt to replicate the looks of trademark Yale residential colleges that were themselves modeled on Oxford and Cambridge, rather than taking a daring stab at bringing new ideas to the landscape within the tradition.
“These are colleges that are trying to look like Yale,” she said. “It’s going to look like it’s trying to look like the other buildings.”
She contrasted that approach to the modernist Morse and Stiles colleges designed by Eero Saarinen. They’re controversial; critics find them cold, poorly designed, out of place in the neoGothic Yale forest. Clark called them ingenious additions that fit right into the landscape. (Saarinen also designed the “Yale Whale,” Ingalls Rink, across the street from the new planned colleges.) She spoke of how Saarinen designed Morse and Stiles so that vistas lead to defining towers in four directions: Payne-Whitney Gym, Christ Church, Harkness, and the Hall of Graduate Studies. The buildings themselves, she said, convey a “Norse/Viking look … I love them. They’re like great Viking mead halls.”
Clark said she wasn’t even “asking” for “something grand” from the designs for the new colleges. “I’m just asking for something with imagination.” Prospect Hill aside, she’s find plenty of it elsewhere in the new New Haven.
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Comments
Posted by: Doriss Day | August 31, 2009 3:03 PM
Great story. I loved it, not the least because I have met Bitsie Clark, ever the politician,... of the best sort. Bitsie for mayor! She is New Haven, for real.
Posted by: Our Town
| August 31, 2009 4:11 PM
Bitsie is quite the character. I disagree with her thoughts on the Coop School, however, I find it to be rather underwhelming when it could have been a remarkable piece of architecture.
Love your smile Bitsie!
Posted by: Norton Street | August 31, 2009 4:32 PM
I agree with the analysis on the Smilow building. Awful to look at on the street, but enormously important because of what will happen on the inside.
The rubik's cube building puzzles me as to why it exists. Such an odd looking building.
The new coop building is nice but I question its location. I haven't had a chance to go inside the building yet, but I'm sure it has architectural worth, I just don't get how New Haven justifies to itself having 2 college campuses and a high school downtown.
My thumb is pointed so far down that its a thumbs up in China.
This is a school:
http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=new+haven&sll=37.0625,-95.677068&sspn=51.576045,114.169922&ie=UTF8&ll=41.292346,-72.941537&spn=0.003015,0.006968&t=h&z=18&layer=c&cbll=41.292395,-72.941625&panoid=EYjkK-4VCmCIiWWFiAO40Q&cbp=12,65.76,,0,-4.56
Enough has been said about Yale's school of Art & Architecture building to like or dislike it. I will say that I've disliked it ever since I cut my hand on it while walking by on Chapel as a child; the building's awkward relationship to ground as it touches the sidewalk makes for an appearance of cutting into the site rather than occupying it.
As for the site for the proposed 2 new colleges, the site is currently underused and occupied by some terribly designed structures. However, buildings change over time in appearance, program, size and style; it is a natural progression of a building's life. To demolish some of the buildings on the site, would be to destroy their potential for adaptation and change, which is inherent in most any building from the time period.
This is a picture of the same buildings with 160 years time elapse:
http://rasmusbroennum.files.wordpress.com/2008/10/howbuildingslearn.gif
(additional info: http://rasmusbroennum.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/how-buildings-learn/)
New Haven or Yale realy can't justify mass demolition when there are numerous vacant lots all over the city. In 1910, demolition for the erection of new buildings was necessary because there was not free space, everything was built up and dense. Today, however there are holes within the urban fabric. My point is that, Yale can build these new colleges but move some of the historic and pleasing buildings/houses to vacant lots in nearby neighborhoods. in a $600 million project, is another $10-20 million really too much if it means we can save things of worth and transplant them to a place that needs things of worth desperately?
Posted by: Norton Street | August 31, 2009 5:07 PM
"My thumb is pointed so far down..." is meant for the metropolitan school on water street.
For the rudolph building, the last sentence is supposed to say "...rather than occupying it gracefully".
Posted by: Norton Street | August 31, 2009 5:13 PM
yikes, mistakes galore.
The pictures of the buildings from the links are 130 years apart, not 160. and the last link is supposed to be:
http://rasmusbroennum.wordpress.com/2008/10/16/how-buildings-learn/ the ")" at the end messed up the link.
Posted by: It takes a village | August 31, 2009 5:14 PM
Metropolitan looks a mess.There are very few windows, no outdoor spaces and it is way to too close to the road to be safe.The building committee had other site options with more open spaces, but New Haven would rather sell off its desirable locations to businesses and increase the tax rolls. The less marketable spots then get schools crammed into them without regard for the kids or the neighborhood. It's surprising that some of our older buildings with the big windows (Prince,Welch,Scranton) have been renovated and are quite attractive as offices or charter schools. Also, why are so many new schools downtown when security has had to be increased and the mall shut down because of the concerns over large groups of teens there after school? Lets go back to" kids first" and increase parent involvement by reinstating neighborhood schools, save money on busing and actually spend it on textbooks to use individually(without sharing with 2 classmates) so they can take them home to study and maybe scores will start to go up.
Posted by: robn | August 31, 2009 9:45 PM
Thats it....i'm taking up a collection to get Paul a wider lens and a steadi-cam.
Posted by: Bruce | September 1, 2009 11:32 AM
I never understood why anyone likes that architecture school. As a friend described it "it's the building that seems like it will rip the flesh off your body as you walk by." I'm no architect (obviously) but I think it just looks unwelcoming and completely out of place in its surroundings. Please, design buildings that you don't need a PhD to enjoy.
Posted by: Steve Ross, Human | September 2, 2009 8:44 AM
Bruce,
A Bachelor's Degree (English, no less!), and I love the A&A building -- though I loved it more before it was mated with a totally dissimilar structure. I say this not because I think that "you're wrong", but to offer a different perspective. Taste varies.
I'm curious about the high rise. Have they said unequivocally how tall it's to be?
Posted by: Bill Saunders | September 2, 2009 11:59 AM
Human Steve,
I am not one for unsympathetic additions to architectural "masterpieces", but I must say, that new addition to the A&A building is an improvement.
What was once a misplaced monolith in downtown New Haven has been transformed to a Citadel worthy of Yale University.
Posted by: anon | September 3, 2009 5:54 PM
I think the new addition is beautiful. Just like the Eiffel Tower, the criticism should mellow over time.
The old architecture building has a bizarre razor-sharp surface, certainly at ground level not suitable for a busy street corner -- but on the whole it's interesting in different light and weather, which you can't say about many of the other structures built recently in New Haven. It's definitely a landmark and, like the once-decrepit Art Gallery across the street, the renovation has made it a much more pleasing thing to look at.
The inside of the building is the real work of art, with 35+ different levels, dozens of massive multi-story skylights, maze-like nooks and crannies, and cool views from one level to the other... which gives it a bit of a "Big Brother" quality, but makes it unlike any other building in the country.
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