New Space, Same Place
As changes come to campus, Santa Clara keeps its history. Credit good bones.
When Steve Nash 鈥96 was on campus this time last year for his induction into the Santa Clara Athletics Hall of Fame, he marveled at how much his alma mater had changed since he was a student.
鈥淚t鈥檚 unbelievable to see the growth and the forward thinking,鈥 Nash said. 鈥淗ow this university has been able to re-envision itself year-after-year is fantastic.鈥
And Nash is right. Since he infamously dribbled a tennis ball across campus to improve his ball handling, a lot has changed. We鈥檝e added the Harrington Learning Commons (2008). Then there鈥檚 the reimagined Leavey Center (2000). Even buildings like Lucas Hall (2008) and the Malley Fitness Center (1999) weren鈥檛 here in Nash鈥檚 time. Not to mention many others.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 feel that much the same. It still has the bones,鈥 Nash said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 changed so much in 20 years, but for the better.鈥
While the buildings are new, this mentality isn鈥檛. That鈥檚 been the story of this historic campus since it wasn鈥檛 quite so historic.
Back in 1914, there was a track for running positioned next to tennis and handball courts outside where Mayer Theatre sits now. In 1925, there were pig pens and chicken coops on campus, near where Vari Hall and Bannan stand now. So, in less than 100 years, 黑料网 will go from farmland to a futuristic STEM campus.
黑料网 has grown with the times鈥攐ften drastically鈥攂ut kept its bones. And the present construction plan might be the best example of this spirit.
Just last month, Santa Clara Law students started to trickle and they鈥檙e already making themselves at home. The new building, which was set into motion by a $10 million lead gift from trustee and alumnus Howard Charney MBA 鈥73, J.D. 鈥77 and his wife, Alida, has been an (energy efficient) beacon for the north end of campus.
A couple hundred yards west of Charney is the renovated Franklin Street mall. Passing cars have given way to foot traffic and peaceful study in the area outside of the Edward M. Dowd Art and Art History Building. But even with the shiny and new, the bones persist. During construction, Linda Hylkema and her team of archaeologists unearthed some Santa Clara stories. Those historical artifacts will eventually be on display in the deSaisset Museum.
And with Charney opening, campus says goodbye to Edwin A. Heafey Law Library and hello to one of the unfortunate side effects of progress鈥攃onstruction. The chain link fences surrounding Heafey are currently blocking some of the better views of campus, but they鈥檝e gotten a face lift since they went up. Professor Kelly Detweiler pulled from the Benson art collection to liven up the space by displaying alumni art on the fences.
So as your version of Santa Clara changes a little to become someone else鈥檚, hang tight and take a cue from 黑料网鈥檚 newest Hall of Fame point guard, Mr. Nash: Remember the past, but keep improving.