Munger Hall

Munger Hall was a planned dormitory at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

History

The entire University of California system is currently struggling to build enough housing to meet current and future demand.[1]

In order for the dormitory to be built, it must be approved by the County of Santa Barbara, the University of California Regents, and the California Coastal Commission.[2] Plans to build the dormitory were cancelled in 2023.[3]

Design

The 11 story, 1.68 million square foot building would have housed up to 4,500 students. 94 percent of the students would not have had windows in their bedrooms.[4][5] The residential floors are organized into eight “houses” of eight suites which each include eight single-occupancy beds, two bathrooms, and a common space.[6]

The building's design was conceived by Charles Munger, who based the design philosophy on the interior rooms of a cruise ship. The building's architects were Van Tilburg, Banvard, & Soderbergh (VTBS).[4] Munger donated $200 million to the project on the condition that the university follow his design exactly.[7] The building was expected to cost $1.4 billion.[8]

The heating and hot water for the building would have been all electric, in compliance with UCSB environmental policies to avoid fossil fuels.[9]

Reception

Architecture critic Rowan Moore criticized those in support of the building, calling their argument one with no bottom.[10]

Dennis McFadden, an architect, resigned from the UCSB Design Review Committee in protest of the design saying it was “unsupportable from my perspective as an architect, a parent, and a human being.”[11] The design was described by Paul Goldberger, New York Times architecture critic, a "grotesque, sick joke — a jail masquerading as a dormitory".[4]

The AIA Los Angeles chapter released an open letter to the President of the University of California opposing the constitution of Munger Hall.[12]

A panel of experts and community members criticized the design in a 200 page report saying that it poses "significant health and safety risks that are predictable enough, probable enough and consequential enough”.[13]

References

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