96-02-02 TRUSTEES: Master Plan for Academic Core Area OHIO STATE ADOPTS MASTER PLAN FOR ACADEMIC CORE AREA COLUMBUS -- In 2025, Ohio State will have a whole new face, but university planners already are starting to draw what that face will look like. The university's Board of Trustees on Friday (2/2) approved the third volume of the university's Campus Master Plan, this one detailing guidelines for the area the university calls the Academic Core North district. The area, bounded by High Street, Ohio 315 and Lane and West 12th avenues, contains the bulk of the university's academic, academic support and student service facilities. Recommendations of the plan already have been put into use, said Jill Morelli, assistant vice president and university architect. Planners recently were able to use the siting recommendations from a draft of the district plan when they looked at locations for two buildings (the Austin E. Knowlton School of Architecture and a physical sciences research building) and proposed projects (an arts complex and mechanical engineering building). Based on the guidelines, planners offered several scenarios for the four sites, and the university now will decide which scenarios it wants to advance, Morelli said. Locating the buildings in the academic core continues to reverse the trend of past campus planning, when most buildings were sited in outlying areas such as West Campus. The new proposed sites continue the trend set by the Woodruff Avenue location selected for the Max M. Fisher College of Business. Notable features in the plan for the new face of the Columbus campus include priorities for keeping academic functions near each other to reinforce the pedestrian environment on campus. When physically and financially possible, the plan urges placing research facilities adjacent to their related academic disciplines. Four Columbus campus face-lifts will result from future redevelopment of sites occupied by existing buildings that are no longer adaptable to continued use as academic facilities. They are: Lord Hall, Robinson Laboratory, the Welding Engineering Building and Neil and 17th Building. The plan also shapes improvements to open green spaces, such as the Oval, Mirror Lake Hollow, the banks of the Olentangy River and, eventually, the Ohio Stadium area and neighboring recreation fields. Planners would like to cover the parking lot surrounding the stadium with grass and trees to enhance the structure as a campus icon. The plan identifies campus entries and gateways from the primary approaches of High Street and Lane and Neil avenues and recommends improvements to Fyffe Road and Tuttle Park Place to make them public entries to the district. At the Lane intersections with Fyffe and Tuttle Park, planners suggest gateways with walls and trees. They also recommend new building sites along a realigned Tuttle Park. Planners suggest a gateway plaza at the intersection of Neil and West 12th avenues. In addition, the plan also addresses parking problems by replacing some large surface lots with garages. Of the more than 6.3 million gross square feet of development potential in the district, nearly one-third would be used by the planners for structured parking. Other changes to the face of the district will take place during the next 30 to 50 years. "The district plan is an early application of what we hope will happen for many years to come," said Jean Hansford, senior campus planner in the Office of the University Architect and Physical Planning. The plan approved by trustees is the first in a series of detailed district plans. It amplifies the themes of the Long Range Concept Plan, Volume II of the Master Plan series, putting to practical use principles on land use, architecture and landscape, density and development sites, traffic circulation and parking, utilities and sanitary and storm sewer systems, and site improvement priorities. Because of the vast size of the Columbus campus, the district planning process provides an opportunity for the university to address planning and design issues in a manageable context. The guidelines are the standards by which the university's Design Review Board will evaluate project proposals. The district plan was drawn up by the university's Interim Master Planning Advisory Committee with planning consultants Sasaki Associates Inc., Michael Dennis Associates and Moody/Nolan Ltd. Inc. The three volumes of the Master Plan to date are available on the World Wide Web at http://www.apo.ohio- state.edu. # Contact: Jill Morelli, (614) 292-4458, or Jean Hansford, (614) 292-5974. Written by David Bhaerman. [Submitted by: Von Reid-Vargas (ereid@magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu) Mon, 5 Feb 1996 09:13:21 -0500] All documents are the responsibility of their originator.