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Video preview of new Schwarzman Center at Yale

March 12, 2021

As one in the series of Zoom events making up the YAA 2020-21 Assembly, Yale broadcast a video of the new Schwarzman Center at Yale, a new space around and below Commons. Though it is not scheduled to open until Fall of 2021, the resources are stunning.



A Place for All Yale

The Schwarzman Center invites everyone in for food, talk, and ideas

Yale Alumni Magazine

March/April 2021

After three and a half years of construction and renovations, the Yale Schwarzman Center is ready to open.

But, as with so many other things these days, we’re going to have to wait a while. Because of pandemic restrictions, the public won’t be seeing the inside of Yale’s new center for student life and the arts until the fall of 2021. In the meantime, let us introduce you to some scenes of the center’s interior and catch you up on what to expect when it opens.

First things first: Commons, the cavernous 120-year-old room that rivals Hogwarts’s Great Hall in majesty, is still a dining hall and looks reassuringly familiar. Since plans were announced in 2015 to create the Yale Schwarzman Center (YSC) in Commons and adjacent spaces, alumni have persistently expressed fears and concerns that their beloved dining hall was going to be remodeled out of existence. Rest assured that, once Yale is over the pandemic, Commons will still be serving lunch daily, its floor covered with tables and chairs as in earlier days.

That said, the space has had a largely invisible upgrade that includes air conditioning, upgrades to life-safety systems, acoustical improvements, and provisions for lighting, audio, and projection. All that will make it a flexible venue for performances and other events. “Even though visually it looks like a straight restoration, it really is quite a transformation in terms of infrastructure,” says Garth Ross, executive director of YSC since 2018.

Although the Center’s upcoming in-person programs have not been announced yet, Ross says that Commons could be set up for events with bleacher seating, with a stage and floor seating (as was done for a 2017 concert by Wynton Marsalis), or with a runway. “We expect to continually experiment with that space and really test the limits of what’s possible.”

But Commons is just one part of YSC. The people who conceived the Center — and its designers, Robert A. M. Stern Architects — incorporated both familiar and underused spaces in Commons and Memorial Hall to find room for a host of activities and venues for the Yale community. The Presidents’ Room, on the second floor just above the Memorial Hall rotunda, has been restored and will continue to be used for dinners and receptions, as well as some new uses. Above that, the dome of Memorial Hall — once home to the Yale Banner yearbook — has been restored and reimagined as a performance space, complete with a sprung floor for dance events. Outside both these rooms, generous curved corridors will be used as galleries for art exhibitions.

The Annex, a long, narrow addition to Commons on its Grove Street side, will provide more space. The first floor of the addition houses a new food-service area for Commons. Above that, on the second floor, are student spaces including light-filled, open lounge areas and a second location for the Good Life Center, a locus for student wellness. YSC’s staff offices are on the third floor.

But the most remarkable repurposing is in the basement of Commons and Memorial Hall, where rooms once used for kitchens and storerooms have been combined with newly excavated space to create a subterranean playground, accessible from Beinecke Plaza via a new outdoor stairway. This level includes a dance studio, a grab-and-go food-service spot called the Bow Wow, a café and performance space known as The Underground, and — directly beneath the rotunda — a circular pub called The Well that will serve beer, wine, cider, and kombucha.

These spaces get to the heart of YSC’s goal of providing a hub for all of Yale — undergraduates, graduate and professional students, faculty, and staff — and even beyond Yale for the surrounding community. (YSC spaces will be open to the public.) Besides offering arts events and places to eat and drink, YSC is designed to encourage serendipitous encounters among people from all parts of the university. “As in a traditional student union,” says Ross, “there’ll be lots of opportunities to just plop down with your laptop and get a cup of coffee, and then maybe a friend comes in and plops down next to you. And that’ll happen throughout the building. That’s the way Yale College students are fortunate to be able to live in their colleges, and that’s the experience we’re looking to extend to the broader Yale community.”

The idea of a gregarious space to encourage community goes back to the Center’s conception, which came out of discussions between President Peter Salovey ’86PhD and Stephen Schwarzman ’69, who gave $150 million to fund the construction and establish the center. Schwarzman, chair and CEO of the Blackstone Group, is known for his philanthropy (among other donations, he has given $350 million to MIT, $100 million to the New York Public Library, and $100 million to establish the Schwarzman Scholars program for study in China) and for his role in the Trump administration as chair of the Strategic and Policy Forum. Schwarzman was a contributor to Trump’s reelection campaign, but he acknowledged Joe Biden’s victory in late November, offered to help the newly elected president, and condemned the January attack on the Capitol.

Schwarzman wanted to see Commons blossom. “Commons always had a big emotional impact on me,” Schwarzman told the New York Times in 2015. “I did not know one person when I went [to Yale] and I was very lonely. I’ve always been interested in that building and what goes on there.” When the gift was announced, Schwarzman told YaleNews, “My hope is that the Schwarzman Center will serve as the crossroads for the campus, but also place Yale at the crossroads of the world.”

With most Yale employees restricted to working remotely through at least the end of April, it will be a while before even the YSC staff is able to enjoy the Center. But before the pandemic, YSC had planned for some of its programming to go online, and those efforts are already underway and visible at Schwarzman.yale.edu. The offerings include a digital dance project with the Yale Dance Lab, a video series called One that features student artists, and a panel discussion with Yale Women in Architecture about architecture and social change.

And with any luck, the physical center will soon be ready for Yalies to give it a spin. “We’re aiming for the building to be fully open in the fall,” says Ross. “But we’re braced for surprises.”