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E-raamat: Rutgers Then and Now: Two Centuries of Campus Development: A Historic and Photographic Odyssey

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Nov-2024
  • Kirjastus: Rutgers University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781978824737
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
  • Hind: 56,09 €*
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"Rutgers Then and Now presents an evolutionary perspective - descriptive, analytic, and photographic - on the buildings and the grounds that comprise the historic Rutgers College Avenue Campus. The book opens with an examination of the university's nineteenth-century territorial roots set on a site donated to Queens College in 1808, upon which construction commenced the following year on the iconic "Old Queens" building. The book continues through the sequential phases of campus expansion that took placeover the succeeding centuries. The central photographic and pictorial emphasis is a comparison of "what it was originally" versus "what it is today", drawing on over five hundred images from the combined collections of Rutgers University Archives and thephotography of Richard L. Edwards. Prefaced by contributions from Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway and New Brunswick Theological Seminary President Micah L. McCreary, authors James W. Hughes, David Listokin, and Richard L. Edwards provide invaluable commentary on architecture and campus design from the perspective of "seasoned" urban planners and university administrators, rather than as formal architectural scholars or art historians. The authors also selectively trace the multiple physical movements of several of the college's academic and athletic functions as they migrated to newer and expanding facilities, ultimately providing the definitive work on how the buildings and grounds of the campus were planned and came to be in the twenty-first century"--

Rutgers University has come a long way since it was granted a royal charter in 1766. It migrated from a parsonage in Somerville, to New Brunswick-sited The Sign of the Red Lion tavern, to stately Old Queens, expanding northward along College Avenue, and beyond. Replete with more than 500 campus images, Rutgers, Then and Now offers stunning pictorial and historical evidence of what it was then, side by side, with what it is today, a vital hub for research and beloved home for students.
 


Rutgers University has come a long way since it was granted a royal charter in 1766. As it migrated from a parsonage in Somerville, to the New Brunswick-sited Sign of the Red Lion tavern, to stately Old Queens, and expanded northward along College Avenue, it would both compete and collaborate with the city that surrounded it for room to grow.

Rutgers, Then and Now tells this story, proceeding through ten sequential development phases of College Avenue and Piscataway campus expansions—each with its own buildings and physical layouts—that took place over the course of 250 years. It delivers stunning photographic and historic documentation of the growth of the university, showing “what it was and appeared originally” versus “what it is and looks like today.” Among other in-depth analyses, the book compares the diminutive geographic scale of today’s historical College Avenue Campus—once the entirety of Rutgers—to the much larger-sized (in acreage) Busch Campus. Replete with more than 500 images, the book also considers the Rutgers campuses that might have been, examining plans that were changed or abandoned. Shedding light on the sacrifices and gifts that transformed a small college into a vital hub for research and beloved home for students, it explores how Rutgers grew to become a world-class university.

 

Arvustused

"Rutgers Then and Now brings to life the vibrant trajectory of the Rutgers campus from its origin in the single building of Old Queens to the sweeping campus along the Raritan River today. Through historic and contemporary photographs, original architectural drawings and renderings, and plans and maps of the campus and its urban setting, it traces the evolution of a veritable museum of architecture and landscape. With deft and literate commentary, the distinguished authors of this volume highlight the variety of forces-architectural, social, and economic-that shaped today's Rutgers campus." - Michael Farewell, FAIA, Principal, Farewell Architects, LLC "I am fascinated by the story that Jim Hughes, David Listokin, and Dick Edwards have told in this book through words and pictures, focusing on the birthplace of our remarkable university. I take immense pride in their scholarship and their mighty achievement in capturing the sweep of Rutgers's evolution over more than two and a half centuries." - Jonathan Scott Holloway (President of Rutgers University, from the foreword)

Foreword by Jonathan Scott Holloway
Foreword by Micah L. McCreary
Acknowledgments
Chapter
1. Introduction
Part One. Campus Stages: The History and Evolution of the Rutgers College
Avenue Campus
Chapter
2. Queens Campus (Stage 1)
Chapter
3. Seminary Campus/Seminary Hill (Stage 2)
Chapter
4. Neilson Campus (Voorhees Mall) (Stage 3)
Chapter
5. Neilson Field/College Field (Stages 4 and 5)
Chapter
6. Bishop Campus (Stage 6)
Chapter
7. River Road Campus (The Heights/Busch Campus) (Stage 7)
Chapter
8. Alexander Library and Rutgers Prep Dormitories (Stage 8)
Chapter
9. River DormsCollege Park (Stage 9)
Chapter
10. College Avenue and Seminary Hill Redevelopment (Stage 10)
Chapter
11. Afterword
Part Two. Campus Contexts
I. The First Inhabitants: Native Americans in New Jersey
II. Precolonial Industry on Campus Grounds: The French Copper Mine
III. PreOld Queens: The Peripatetic Queens College in the Eighteenth
Century
IV. Transportation and Development History: Campus Constraints
V. Rutgers Preparatory School: Descendant of Queens College Grammar School
VI. The 1927 Plan: Two Disparate (Transformational and Incremental) Campus
Visions
VII. A Century of College Avenue Campus Master Plans and Visions
VIII. Greetings from Rutgers: Historic Postcards of the Rutgers College
Avenue Campus
Building Lists Alphabetically, by Year, and by Stage
Index
JAMES W. HUGHES is both a university professor and a distinguished professor of urban planning and policy development at Rutgers, where he served as dean of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy from 1995 to 2017. He has authored or coauthored over thirty-five books, including Americas Demographic Tapestry and Population Trends in New Jersey (both from the Rutgers University Press) and The Atlantic City Gamble.   DAVID LISTOKIN is a distinguished professor at Rutgers Bloustein School and is associate director of Bloustein's Center for Urban Policy Research.  A leading authority on public finance, historic preservation, and urban redevelopment, he has authored or coauthored twenty-five books, including New Brunswick, New Jersey: The Decline and Revitalization of Urban America (Rutgers University Press) and Mortgage Lending and Race.      RICHARD L. EDWARDS is both a university professor and distinguished professor who served as chancellor of RutgersNew Brunswick from 2012 to 2017.  He previously served as executive vice president for academic affairs and dean of the School of Social Work. He was editor in chief of the nineteenth edition of the Encyclopedia of Social Work. Included among his other publications are Building a Strong Foundation-Fundraising for Nonprofits and Leading and Managing Nonprofit Organizations.

JONATHAN SCOTT HOLLOWAY is the twenty-first president of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. He is the author of The Cause of Freedom: A Concise History of African Americans.

REV. MICAH L. McCREARY is the president of the New Brunswick Theological Seminary and RCA General Synod Professor. He is the author of Trauma and Race: A Pathway to Well-Being.