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Monday, December, 06, 2010

Ouch! Move into New Moshe Safdie-Designed Campus in 2001; Sell It and Move Out in 2010

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As reported by Lisa Wangsness in The Boston Globe, when Hebrew College moved into its brand new Moshe-Safdie-designed building in 2001, it had high hopes. But those hopes were financed by borrowing, perhaps too much borrowing. Now the school is selling its Newton campus and moving into rented space nearby at Andover Newton. The new president says that the school is a community of learners, not a building:

The deal, which relies on private donations as well as the proceeds from the building’s sale, is a painful sacrifice for an institution with dreams of becoming a preeminent Jewish cultural center and academic powerhouse. But it is also a relief: Mortgage and maintenance costs far exceeded the college’s fund-raising capacity, particularly amid an economic downturn that has badly shaken the financial stability of colleges and universities nationwide. In the past three years, Hebrew College has slashed its operating budget nearly in half, and it has no equity in its building.

Lehmann, who replaced the school’s previous leader, David M. Gordis, in 2008, said the debt settlement will reposition the college to continue operating — and growing — albeit in rented quarters.

“We are excited about what our financial stability is going to allow us to do, moving forward — and I can say, taking the pulse of students, faculty, and staff here, that there is a sense of real opportunity and energy in this community about it,’’ he said. “It wasn’t an easy decision but . . . the board and I felt very strongly that Hebrew College is not about a building. . . . This is about a community of learners.’’

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Monday, September, 24, 2007

Mixed Grades for Fordham University's Growth Plan

This article by Alex Mindlin in The New York Times, describes neighborhood opposition to campus expansion plans at Fordham University in New York City, including the sale of some formerly public university land for private development:
For five decades, Fordham University’s campus near Lincoln Center has had the feel of a cathedral close. The campus, which extends from Columbus to Amsterdam Avenue between 60th and 62nd Streets, is relatively underbuilt. At its heart is a grassy plaza from which the sky is visible in three directions. The land was sold to Fordham in the 1950s by the city, which had acquired it using eminent domain.

In 2005, citing enrollment that was double what could comfortably fit, Fordham proposed to vastly expand this campus over the next 25 years, tripling the built space on its land with eight new buildings in a horseshoe arrangement. The tallest buildings, at 50 and 55 stories, would be a pair of private apartment towers on Amsterdam Avenue. Proceeds from the sale of those lots would help finance Fordham’s other new buildings, including 25- and 31-story dormitories along Columbus Avenue.

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