Where is Sand Hill?

Landscape architects Winston Associates announced during 2004 that Dartmouth had selected Winston and Wolff-Lyon to plan a 200-unit Sand Hill neighborhood that would include an integrated parking/transit transfer center.

Sand Hill does not seem to be a prominent landmark in Hanover or Lebanon. A Parking Committee Recommendation describes Sand Hill as an undeveloped site with room for 450 parking spaces, while the OPDC parking spreadsheet (Excel file) indicates that 300 new parking spots are expected to open in the Sand Hill Lot during fiscal year 2007.

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[Update 11.17.2012: Broken link to Winston link really fixed.]
[Update 11.12.2012: Broken Winston link fixed.]

Wolff Lyon’s master plan for Rivercrest (2004)

The Boulder-based firm of Wolff Lyon Architects, which developed some of the guidelines for the massive redevelopment of Denver’s Stapleton Airport as a town, worked with Boulder landscape architects Winston Associates to complete a master plan for Dartmouth’s total reconstruction of its suburban Rivercrest housing development, north of CRREL and south of Kendal. This project, also known as Dresden Village in planning documents, seems to be taking a while in the town’s regulatory process.

(More on the firm from Wellington in Breckenridge, Colo. Is it coincidence that the master planner for Kendal at Hanover, adjacent Rivercrest, is another Boulder firm, Architecture Incorporated?)

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[Update 11.17.2012: Broken link to Winston really fixed.]
[Update 11.12.2012: Broken links to Winston and Wellington fixed.]
[Update 01.25.2007 Update: Winston link added.]

Brick chosen to harmonize Varsity House

The Floren Varsity House is proceeding ahead of schedule. The OPDC has recent interior views, as does the varsity athletics site. The article in The Dartmouth quotes OPDC Project Manager Mary Bourque:

Although other alternatives were originally considered, brick was selected to integrate with the surrounding buildings. Careful consideration was given to the view of Floren Varsity House from within Memorial Stadium.

Perhaps this explains the substitution of renderings of a brick-skinned building for the original green-paneled design on the school’s website during 2005.

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[Update 11.12.2012: Broken link to news article fixed.]

Kieran Timberlake to design Thayer Dining Hall replacement

The Philadelphia firm of Kieran Timberlake is designing Dartmouth’s new replacement for Thayer Dining Hall. Mr. Timberlake lectured at Dartmouth in 2004 (see also Penn bio; Penn Gazette article).

Rather than retain the frontispiece or conduct a sustainable rehab (as at Yale Law Dining Hall), the school will replace the building entirely between 2008 to 2010.

What will the replacement look like? It is sure to display Kieran Timberlake’s signature glass wall with the Mondrian mullions somewhere, as its dining hall at Middlebury does (another image; see also Levine Hall at Penn). This technique could be a great way to bring light into the north side of the new dining hall and give a view of the trees in the cemetery.

The front on Mass Row, in contast, is where one expects to see some of the solidity of the firm’s other Middlebury buildings (they look appealingly substantial in photos) — not the minimalist experimentation of the Marks Science Center in Brooklyn or Cook House at Cornell.

Although photos suggest that the firm’s best dining rooms are the historic ones it has renovated, the main dining room is likely to be an informal one.

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[Update 11.12.2012: Broken link to lecture mention removed.]

Dartmouth opens tech incubator

The Route 120 tech incubator known as the Dartmouth Regional Technology Center in Centerra Resource Park [no website left] looks interesting as depicted on the website of its designers, UK Architects of Hanover.

Construction began in August 2005 (pdf) and finished last fall, according to a thorough article in New Hampshire Business Review.

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[Update 11.11.2012: Link added for DRTC; broken link to Batelle pdf regarding start date removed; broken link to NHBR replaced.]

Upper Valley Rowing Club Boathouse projected

The boathouse of the Upper Valley Rowing Club, formerly the Dresden Rowing Club, is projected to open this year near the Wilder Dam. It appears in a rendering by U.K. Architects of Hanover.

The Connecticut Valley Spectator wrote on the club’s growth, reprinted in Rowing News.

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[Update 11.12.2012: Broken links to firm site fixed and Rowing News omitted.]
[Update 01.24.2007: Link to firm’s site added.]

Dartmouth building Remote Data Center

The December 8, 2006 Capital Project Schedule (pdf) describes a Remote Data Center, a telecommunications network hub a mile and a half from campus, in Lebanon (presumably the 56 Etna Road Data Center, off Route 120).

The building seems to be the one that connects to the campus with a point-to-point radio network described in American School and University Magazine.