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The University Campus As A Designed Work and an Artefact of Cultural Heritage

The University Campus in the United States—As a Designed Work to Produce Knowledge; and as an Artefact of Cultural Heritage

Paul Hardin Kapp
School of Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Illinois, United States

 

ABSTRACT: The university campus in the United States is a unique architectural and landscape architecture typology. Nothing like it existed until Harvard University was established in 1638. Invented during in the 17th century by the American colonists and later developed during the American Industrial Revolution, the American campus is a community devoted to teaching and generating knowledge. It can be urban, suburban, and/or rural in form and its planning directly correlates with a university’s research mission and the pedagogy of the American university system. Its buildings and landscapes are embedded with iconography, which the founding builders used to convey their values to future generations.

This paper presents the history of how this designed work first emerged in American society and then evolved in ways that responded to changes that occurred in America. At the end of the 20th century, universities conserved parts of them as cultural heritage monuments. Originally, the university campus was built to disseminate a classical education, but later, the campus was built for technical and agricultural education. By the beginning of the 20th century, professional education and sport changed its architecture and landscape. The paper briely discusses that while it has inspired how universities are built to teach and generate knowledge throughout the world. It concludes by reairming its value to cultural heritage and that it should be conserved.

Illinois

North Park University Lake County

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Lazy Poverty in the American South

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Anscombe’s Quartet

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Standards Illinois

“La Salle and Party Arrive at the Village of the Illinois” / George Catlin

We continue build out of our collaboration architecture for “code writers and vote-getters” begun at the University of Michigan in 1993.  We are now drilling down into state and local adaptations of nationally developed codes and standards that are incorporated by reference into public safety and sustainability legislation.

1117 South Oak Street

The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign operates a large and complex district energy system to provide heating, cooling, and electricity to the campus. According to the latest available data from 2020, the UIUC district energy system includes:

  • 53 MW of electricity generation capacity
  • 1.6 million square feet of building space heated with steam
  • 17,000 tons of chilled water capacity for air conditioning
  • 63 miles of underground piping for steam, chilled water, and condensate distribution

The UIUC district energy system is also designed to be energy-efficient and sustainable, with various measures in place to reduce energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions, such as high-efficiency boilers and chillers, thermal energy storage, and the use of renewable energy sources like solar power.

Facilities & Services: Utilities & Energy Services

Illinois

Souls Without Longing

“Education is simply the soul of a society

as it passes from one generation to another”

— G.K. Chesterton

 

 

O Lost: Chicagoland Illinois

 

Origins of Hospitality

Passages from Chinese literature about “social practice”:

• From the Book of Rites (《礼记》), a Confucian classic:

“慎始以為客,礼之至也。一日以为主,恩之至也。”

Translation: “To treat a guest with caution and respect is the height of ritual. To treat a guest as if he were one’s own master for a day is the height of kindness.”

This passage emphasizes the importance of hospitality as a key aspect of ritual and ethical behavior. It suggests that treating guests with respect and kindness is not only a matter of good manners, but also a reflection of one’s character and values.

• From “Journey to the West” (《西游记》), a classic Chinese novel:

“人情好客,至乐莫甚。”

Translation: “There is no greater pleasure than being hospitable and friendly to others.”

This passage highlights the joy and fulfillment that comes from showing hospitality and kindness to others. It suggests that the act of hosting and welcoming guests can bring happiness and satisfaction to both the host and the guest.

• From “The Analects” (《论语》), a collection of sayings and teachings attributed to Confucius:

“舍尔其为人也,尽礼而已。”

Translation: “When you host someone, treat them with the utmost respect and courtesy.”

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