News
HMS Is Facing a Deficit. Under Trump, Some Fear It May Get Worse.
News
Cambridge Police Respond to Three Armed Robberies Over Holiday Weekend
News
What’s Next for Harvard’s Legacy of Slavery Initiative?
News
MassDOT Adds Unpopular Train Layover to Allston I-90 Project in Sudden Reversal
News
Denied Winter Campus Housing, International Students Scramble to Find Alternative Options
Late yesterday afternoon fire alarm bells rang at 1737 Cambridge
Street, forcing the last students still around before break to stream
out of their classes in the Knafel Building of Harvard’s Center for
Government and International Studies (CGIS) and mill about a fire truck
while firefighters inspected the building.
The false alarm was the latest event in a series of minor
frustrations that have dogged users of the CGIS buildings ever since
they opened at the start of the semester. But despite months of mild
annoyances including temperature complaints, some uncompleted
facilities, and ongoing construction work, most students and faculty
members seem resigned to the situation.
“I believe there have been some problems with the two
buildings, but in my experience they have been relatively minor,” John
H. Coatsworth, director of the David Rockefeller Center for Latin
American Studies and an inhabitant of a second-floor office, said. “The
most significant...problem I have observed is that some of the offices
become too cold on cold days.”
John S. Haddock ’07, who has been going to the CGIS complex
since September, said, “We definitely came into the semester having
buildings that were unfinished ...and you kind of expect with having to
do work that they will be finished.”
Douglas E. Lieb ’07, a member of a Social Studies tutorial
that meets every week in CGIS, mentioned ongoing painting projects as
an occasional distraction, but said he was satisfied with the CGIS
complex as a whole.
“It’s growing on me slowly. Clearly, when they opened it, it
wasn’t really ready yet,” he said. “Pretty consistently there was work
going on throughout the day, but it wasn’t anything major... [The] fire
alarm shenanigans were the first real technical problems I’ve
experienced, although there is always a very loud banging in a pipe in
the basement when I have class there.”
Despite these issues, Lieb added, “I think it’s a pretty
usable space, and they did a good job of incorporating lots of light
into the building.”
The CGIS, made up of the Knafel Building and the still-unnamed
South Building, has been beset by difficulties throughout its short
lifespan. Initially, disputes erupted between the City of Cambridge and
the University over the planned location of the complex, and its effect
on the areas around it. Original designs for a tunnel connecting the
two buildings under the street were abandoned after they met with
fierce local opposition that drove the price tag up by $10 million—a
sum the College deemed unreasonable.
Additional delays and increasingly ambitious construction
plans drove the costs up from the originally projected $30 million to a
total of $140 million, and fragile details of the buildings, such as
their already-cracking outer coating, are expected to keep maintenance
costs high.
As for prevalent complaints about the temperature, Matthew P.
Stec, Manager of Facilities for the Office of Physical Resources, said
that the buildings were heated according to Harvard’s policy—between 68
to 72 degrees Farenheit—but suggested that the CGIS’ glass walls might
make the rooms feel colder than they really are.
He added that most of the incomplete construction projects are
beginning to wrap up. “The case study room was not yet ready...it was
taken offline this semester because the contractors just hadn’t
finished,” he said. “When we moved in there was a lot of work to do, a
lot of work being done. I mean it was a challenge at first but now
pretty much everything is done.”
And the mystery of yesterday’s fire alarms has been solved.
“That was a faculty member cooking a bag of coffee in a microwave,”
Stec revealed.
—Staff writer Alexandra C. Bell can be reached at acbell@fas.harvard.edu.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.