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Alumni Pool

Alumni Pool and Wang Fitness Center; Building 57
Fair
  • Modern Movement
  • Identity of Building/Site
  • History of Building/Site
  • Evaluation
  • Documentation

Alumni Pool

Site overview

Alumni Pool, designed by Laurence Bernhart Anderson and Herbert Lynes Beckwith and completed in 1939, is recognized as one of the first Modernist buildings constructed on an American college campus. Although the original context has since been significantly altered by later buildings, the pool building was intended as the centerpiece of a "back" court on the MIT campus, and envisioned by the architects to be a nucleus of a much-larger athletic complex. The placement of the main pool volume is such that the south elevation's large wall of glass was originally a natural-light source for the pool, and the adjacent walled garden served as an outdoor sunbathing location in the summer months.

How to Visit

Private university building

Location

6 Vassar Street
Cambridge, MA, 02139

Country

US
More visitation information

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Designer(s)

Herbert Lynes Beckwith

Architect

Laurence Bernhart Anderson

Architect

Related chapter

New England

Related Sites

Commission

1939

Completion

1940

Commission / Completion details

Designed 1939, completed 1940.

Current Use

Swimming/aquatics.

Current Condition

Fair. The building once sat at a \"back" court on the campus, and stood as the most significant structure in the court. The construction of the nearby Compton Lab and Dorrance Lab (also designed by Beckwith), along with other buildings has completely shrouded the pool, and significantly altered the context and the purpose of the once-walled Class of 1923 garden. The garden, on the south side of the pool, was originally intended for sunbathing, and only portions of the east and west walls remain.

Technical

The building was designed to best meet the functional needs of the swimming pool, offices, and bleachers, and therefore adhers to the modern-movement tenet of form following fuction.

Social

Intended to serve the athletic needs of the MIT campus, and planned as part of a larger program to improve athletic facilites at MIT. \"Second unit in the Institute's program for better facilities for building the man as well as the mind, the new structure is the fist unit of the great recreational center planned for the future."

Cultural & Aesthetic

Along with the adjcent Briggs Field House, also designed by Anderson and Beckwith and completed in 1939, Alumni Pool is recognized as one of the first buildings on a college campus built in the modern style. The pool's two-dimensional grid pattern of the glass-and-steel frame is an early example of what will later become a hallmark of Anderson and Beckwith's so-called I-Style Modernism, as defined by Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson.

Historical

The building represents a collaboration between several alumni of MIT. Both Anderson and Beckwith, the architects, graduated from the Institute's School of Architecture in 1930 and 1926, respectively, and served on the School's faculty. In 1937, Anderson and Beckwith formed a firm with William E. Haible, although neither Haible nor the firm is credited with any involvement with Alumni Pool. In 1965 Anderson was appointed dean of the School of Architecture and held that position until 1972. Several of the building's engineers and consultants were also MIT alumni and faculty: James Holt, 1919, associate professor of Mechanical Engineering. Walter C. Voss, 1932, Head of the (then) newly formed Department of Building Engineering and Construction; Donald W. Taylor, 1934, Assistant Professor of Soil Mechanics; Kenneth C. Reynolds, 1925, Associate Professor of Hydraulics; Thomas R. Camp, 1925, Associate Professor of Sanitary Engineering; and Parry Moon, 1927, Associate Professor of Electrical Engineering.

General Assessment

At the time of the structure's completion in 1940, Alumni Pool was judged as \"second to none in ability to serve the purpose for which it was designed." The materials selected for construction represented the most economical and efficient products available. Such features included tempered glass, special acousic materials, and double glazing, and radiant heating in the pool-deck tiles.

References

Orginal plans for the building remain in the archives of the MIT Facilities Department. The MIT Museum has the records of the Alumni Pool and its architects.Kimball, Francis H. \"Sports Buildings." ARCHITECTURAL RECORD 89 (February 1941): 68-71.Cambridge (MA) Historical Commission. "Alumni Pool." File available at the Cambridge Historical Commission, 831 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02139-3068. Referenced 16 May 2003.Burks, Sarah. "Memorandum to the Cambridge Historical Commission: D-757: 6 rear Vassar Street (Building 57, Additions Only)." Cambridge, MA, Cambridge Historical Commission, 1999. Photocopied
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