Harvard Science Center
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Harvard University Science Center is Harvard University's main building for science and math classes and labs. It also has many important rooms and services for students and teachers.
It is located just north of Harvard Yard. The Science Center was built in 1972 and opened the next year, in 1973. It was designed by Josep Lluís Sert, who was the dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Design at that time.
History
Harvard wanted to build a science center for students in the 1950s and 1960s but couldn’t afford it until 1968. That year, Edwin Land, the inventor of the Polaroid "Land" camera, donated $12.5 million to help create the center for undergraduate students.
There were concerns about the cost and moving some science classes far from their usual places. In 1970, a fire destroyed an old building that was planned to be torn down for the new center. The road near Harvard Yard was lowered to make it easier for people to walk between the Yard and the new science buildings.
Harvard hired architects Sert, Jackson and Associates to design the building. Josep Lluis Sert, who designed many Harvard buildings, made the Science Center with lots of steel, concrete, and natural light. Building it took place from 1970 to 1972.
Between 2001 and 2004, the Science Center was updated for $22 million to add space for the Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments and more facilities. A large historic electromechanical computer called the Harvard Mark I was shown in the main lobby until it was moved to a different building.
Facilities
The Science Center has nine stories, plus a basement and an observatory floor. It is home to the History of Science, Mathematics, and Statistics Departments. Key facilities include:
- Cabot Science Library
- Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments with many old objects
- Five large lecture halls for presentations
- Fifteen smaller classrooms for classes
- Teaching labs for chemistry, physics, biology, and other sciences
- A rooftop observatory with telescopes for looking at stars
- Offices for teachers and staff
Below the Science Center is a cooling system that helps keep buildings cool. The plaza in front of the Science Center is a popular spot for food trucks, roller skating, ice skating, markets, and concerts. Special events like Commencement sometimes use tents set up in this area.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Harvard Science Center, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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