Ski U Mah Gopher
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OK, now Travel & Leisure has come out with their most beautiful campuses, and guess what? UW-Madison made the list.
OK, now Travel & Leisure has come out with their most beautiful campuses, and guess what? UW-Madison made the list.
While I love Coffman, one of the most unfortunate parts of campus is that it does indeed turn its back on the river. Lots of great buildings to look at (if you like Gehry, the Weisman is there, Coffman is cool, etc). And the river flats are very peaceful - great for sporting, a jog, or just reading while on the steps behind Coffman. But the parking ramps and larger institutional buildings (hospital stuff) that separates campus from the river is a bummer. You have to go out of your way to get there. By contrast, Wisconsin's student union (the main one, not the newer POS by the stadium) sits right on the big patio against the lake, with multiple buildings also fronting it. I'd give up the green space in a heartbeat if we had the atmosphere UW does along the waterfront in the fall/spring. Imagine if Gilbert's plan was mostly implemented with 4-5 buildings (including dorms) built down on the river banks with great walking paths and patios separating them from the water? Would be awesome.
That said, not a fan of what that northern bridge would mean for car traffic cutting between Northrop and the Mall. One of my favorite things about the UMN East Bank is that it has Washington and 4th/University on the N/S boundaries, but everything in-between is more or less pedestrian zone. Where there are streets, people feel comfortable walking in them. It's quiet. The ped mall on Washington will help this even more.
While I love Coffman, one of the most unfortunate parts of campus is that it does indeed turn its back on the river. Lots of great buildings to look at (if you like Gehry, the Weisman is there, Coffman is cool, etc). And the river flats are very peaceful - great for sporting, a jog, or just reading while on the steps behind Coffman. But the parking ramps and larger institutional buildings (hospital stuff) that separates campus from the river is a bummer. You have to go out of your way to get there. By contrast, Wisconsin's student union (the main one, not the newer POS by the stadium) sits right on the big patio against the lake, with multiple buildings also fronting it. I'd give up the green space in a heartbeat if we had the atmosphere UW does along the waterfront in the fall/spring. Imagine if Gilbert's plan was mostly implemented with 4-5 buildings (including dorms) built down on the river banks with great walking paths and patios separating them from the water? Would be awesome.
I love UofM's campus. Most of it is historic and well-organized. One of the neatest features is how the Knoll, West Bank Mall and East Bank each have their own separate characters. It's 3 campuses in one, and very nice to walk through. (The medical area and athletic buildings and alumni lump are very random and impersonal, though.)
The two big eyesores were Weisman and Peik Hall. Peik Hall should either be removed from the Knoll, or refaced to fit in with the historic buildings.
It was a huge relief when they managed to save Jones and Nicholson from the wrecking ball in the 1990's. My eyes popped out when I heard that might happen.
Science Classroom Building wasn't really visible from anywhere that mattered, though. I actually had a soft spot for that building because I spent so much time in it as an undergrad, and loved the study space on the "top" floor. I also liked the boardwalks. I haven't seen the building that replaced it yet.
The Medical Center is an ugly brutalist eyesore which no doubt helped drag it down.