Asumag 402 201012 Cleveland State

Connection Point

Dec. 1, 2010
A new student center for Cleveland State University (CSU) is a contemporary structure that gives a new sense of place to the university.

A new student center for Cleveland State University (CSU) is a contemporary structure that gives a new sense of place to the university—and reconnects the university to the city of Cleveland.

Marking the start of the second phase of CSU’s master plan to reorient its campus, the 138,000-square-foot center enhances the campus’ urban profile. Fronting on Euclid Avenue, downtown’s main commercial thoroughfare, the center functions as a public gateway, creating an open link with the surrounding city while offering a wide range of services to students and faculty.

The facility is dedicated to student activity space, dining and food service, retail and meeting rooms, becoming the focus of community life for the university. At the same time, the center engages and enlivens its downtown surroundings: Visitors entering from the Euclid Avenue side are greeted with verdant lawns and a broad entryway that slopes gently from the street front, a subtle, welcoming touch that also facilitates access for the disabled.

All the functions included in the building envelope—bookstore, dining, lounge, computer access, offices for student activities and conference meeting spaces—are housed on three stories surrounding a central atrium. The Euclid Avenue main entry leads into this skylighted circulation and activity space, which also connects with campus pedestrian bridges, the main plaza, and below-grade parking behind and beneath the center.

A simple, restrained palette of materials responds to the building’s urban context and expresses its functional components. The central block containing the atrium and interlink from street to campus is articulated in granite; the flanking walls and windows are clad in brick and aluminum respectively. Skybridges connect the center to the surrounding academic building, giving the building an additional dose of visual dynamism.

The opening of the CSU Student Center this fall coincided with the completion of the Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority’s Euclid Corridor Transportation Project. That project, which places a rail stop in front of the building’s entry plaza, will complete the process of weaving the CSU Student Center into the urban fabric of a revitalized downtown.

Architects for the project are Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects (GSAA) (New York City) and Braun & Steidl Architects (Akron/Columbus, Ohio).

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