A campus for all seasons
Art history professor Craig Hanson conducted summer research exploring the history and influence of Calvin鈥檚 Knollcrest campus architecture with three McGregor Student Fellows. The project was one of eight conducted this past summer through the McGregor Undergraduate Research Program, which has funded student-faculty research in the arts, humanities, and social sciences since 1999.
鈥淲e were exploring the architecture, the architect, and the student experience when the campus was first created,鈥 said Gabrielle Freshly 鈥23, one of the student researchers. Freshly and the other students spent the summer digging through Calvin鈥檚 archives, researching the campus鈥 architects and conducting interviews with current and past Calvin community members. What they found points to a connection between identity and design.
When Calvin first moved to the Knollcrest campus in the 鈥60s and 鈥70s, the student body predominantly comprised a tightly- knit Reformed community. Both the physical campus and the Calvin community have changed since then, and while the school鈥檚 legacy remains potent, more expansive visions of Calvin鈥檚 future are also playing a role in the campus鈥 evolution.
In 1956, Calvin College purchased a large plot of land known as Knollcrest farm. Calvin鈥檚 campus at the time was located on Franklin Street, in the heart of Grand Rapids. But after World War II, the college experienced a period of intense growth that the Franklin campus couldn鈥檛 accommodate.
Then-President William Spoelhof turned to architecture firm Perkins and Will, which Hanson described as 鈥渢he most progressive architects for education,鈥 to design and build the new campus. The firm assigned architect William Fyfe, a student of Frank Lloyd Wright, to the project.
Fyfe was a proponent of Prairie style architecture鈥攁 style focused on the integration of buildings and landscape via elements such as flat roofs and natural colors.
The design and construction of the Knollcrest campus took place in a period when the Christian Reformed Church in North America was beginning to think more intentionally about preserving the unity of its community. It made sense for campus architecture to reflect and reinforce that desire, but this has often been interpreted as campus having a 鈥渃losed-in鈥 feel.
When the campus was constructed, it was 鈥減retty isolated,鈥 Freshly said. 鈥淎t the time, it was at the edge of town.鈥
The campus faces inward, too. 鈥淓ntrances are not typically located outside the commons,鈥 Hanson said. This design aligned Calvin with classical European universities like Oxford; officials also hoped that an inward orientation would prevent campus from disturbing the privacy of any surround- ing neighborhoods, according to Hanson.
Calvin at the time was largely composed of the Dutch-American community. 鈥淭he overwhelming majority on campus in the 鈥70s were insiders,鈥 Hanson said. Campus buildings didn鈥檛 have signs; if you were part of the community, you鈥檇 just know where to go.
鈥淲e experience that as snooty inhospitality,鈥 Hanson said鈥攂ut, in reality, it was intended to be hospitable. 鈥淔yfe had this vision that if you showed up on campus and you didn鈥檛 know where you were going, you would ask somebody. It was a vision of hospitality that depended upon an insider community.鈥
But Prairie style also has advantages, according to Hanson. 鈥淏uildings at the University of Chicago, buildings at Yale鈥 they want to impress you,鈥 he said. Calvin鈥檚 campus, on the other hand, 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 suggest a kind of mastery of the surrounding landscape,鈥 Hanson said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not hierarchical. It鈥檚 a very peaceful, coexisting form of architecture.鈥
The various master planning projects currently in the works aim to preserve this feature of Calvin鈥檚 campus while trying to mitigate the feeling of being closed-off.
One example is a new residential master plan, which aims to make small tweaks with big impacts to residence hall designs. The goal is to add light and openness without sacrificing the integrity of the Prairie style.
Adjustments like these keep Calvin鈥檚 architecture from stagnating, according to Hanson, who gained a newfound appreciation for the dynamism of Calvin鈥檚 design through his research. Hanson said, 鈥淚 now think of Calvin鈥檚 campus鈥攅ven the parts I鈥檓 not in love with鈥攁s a sort of ongoing investment. Campus has to be a living, organic thing.鈥
This dynamism has been key throughout Calvin鈥檚 history. The original vision for campus was defined by paradoxes: both closed-off and welcoming, both American and Dutch, both鈥攊n Hanson鈥檚 words鈥 鈥渆mbracing cultural engagement鈥 in its architecture and 鈥渟hrinking away from community engagement鈥 in its location. Now, it鈥檚 even more complex: updates to campus face the need to preserve Calvin鈥檚 historical integrity while recognizing that the school鈥檚 student body composition and reach have changed.
Now, as Calvin designs the next wave of renovations, changes to the physical campus will balance preserving Calvin鈥檚 historical legacy with visions of a more diverse and innovative community.