Architecture
An architectural structure with its foundation in the past and the present
The University of Michigan Student Union building
In ages past, collective and communal places often were simply expected to serve a singular function. A church was to bring together individuals who shared in a similar faith, for instance. A one-room schoolhouse was to bring together students and an educator, united for the singular purpose of learning. However, as society has grown more complex and diverse, so have the structures that encompass intellectual, recreational, and communal life.
This is perhaps best evidenced on the University of Michigan Campus, in the form of the Michigan Student Union. This building is of particular interest, not simply because it is so well trafficked by students of the university. It is also of interest because it aspires to do so much, namely to provide a common nutritional, recreational, and functional gathering place for all students.
One reason this is important is due to the climate of Michigan, always an important architectural consideration. Some students may attend Michigan year 'round, but the greatest numbers of students are present on campus during the coldest months of the year. Furthermore, Michigan is very cold state, one of the colder states of the United States. Thus students, unlike residents of, for instance, the University of Florida, require a place that they can work together in, throughout the year. It must provide them with a comfortable environment, yet it must also protect them with considerable insulation from the elements.
Another important element to be considered is that Michigan is a university, and a large and spread-out one at that. Because it is so large, students may feel lost within its confines. How to give undergraduates in particular a sense of commonality, a unified ethos and a sense that they are part of a social and academic element that binds them all together, despite their different backgrounds, interests, and daily pursuits?
The first criteria by which one should judge a student union, therefore, is if structurally, it creates a place where students can be unified in an atmosphere of communality. Does it bring students together or keep them apart? But beyond this, are the methods by which the structure does so keeping with the specific mission of the university of which the student union is a part? Does the student union comprise the university's mission in such a way that enriches the academic and extracurricular experience of students and fosters school spirit? And by what structural methods does it do so?
Lastly, are the methods the student union employs keeping with the specific spirit of the university in which it is located? After all, the student union of a large, state university may be presented with different challenges than those of a small, liberal arts school. A student union located in a cold, spread out campus must be different than a student union in a warm environment, or even at a school that draws a great percentage of individuals from the local population, whom already have a sense of warm and closeness and a common background.
One of the Michigan Student Union's most notable initial features, upon entering, is the presence of the bookstore upon one side, and its international center upon the other. This immediately proclaims to a potential visitor that Michigan University at Ann Arbor is an intellectual center and an international one. It also, incidentally, shows that school spirit has a prominent center in the heart of the university's social and communal life.
It is interesting to observe how evident visitors (usually prospective students and their parents) experience this part of the space of the building. They stop, and immediately are drawn to the brightness of the bookstore and the university paraphernalia it sells. This selling point of a nice bookstore, although not initially a part of the criteria set for judgment of the building as a whole, suggests that the building immediately serves an important commercial function for the university, not necessarily appreciated by the already-existing student body on a daily basis.
Those who are more jaded by the bookstore's sights, such as the current University of Michigan students themselves, will of course by-pass this part of the building as a matter of course. However, it is also worthy of note that many freshman who are still new to the space will, along with the books they are required...
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