Alfred Lerner Hall

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Alfred Lerner Hall, with Carman Hall rising in the background
Alfred Lerner Hall, with Carman Hall rising in the background

Alfred Lerner Hall is the student center or students' union of Columbia University. It is named for Al Lerner, who financed its construction. Situated on the university's historic Morningside Heights campus in New York City, the building, designed by deconstructivist architect Bernard Tschumi, then dean of Columbia's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, opened in 1999. It attempts to both hew to its context of neoclassical McKim, Mead, and White buildings as well as break out of their mold. In so doing, Lerner Hall features redbrick cladding and proportions that hold the streetwall of university buildings along Broadway, but reveals a vast glass wall to the campus, the largest in North America and fabricated by Eiffel Constructions Metalliques, descendent of the firm that built the Eiffel Tower. Behind the wall are a series of escalating ramps that give the building a unified sense of space and are meant to act as a social meetingplace much like the steps of Low Memorial Library.

The building began receiving harsh criticism even before it was completed. The escalating ramps have never met their purpose as a social meeting place, instead taking up valuable space and slowing movement between floors. The layout--particularly in the administrative areas of the building--has been described as labyrinthine. Neighbors protested that the building serves to further wall off Columbia from the community. Architecture critics have lambasted it for managing to be simultaneously dull and offensive.

Lerner Hall features both a cinema and auditorium named for Roone Arledge, a Columbia alumnus with a distinguished career in sports broadcasting and television news. The auditorium plays host to the annual Varsity Show student musical, among other significant events. The building also contains eateries, performance space, student club space, lounges, and administrative offices.

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[edit] Notable events

In 2005, Lerner Hall was the site of a prank by the university's Senior Society of Sachems, which decorated the ramps overnight with saffron colored banners imitating The Gates, an artistic installation by the artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude, then on display in Central Park.

On October 4, 2006, Lerner Hall was rocked by an aggressive protest of the volunteer border-patrol force The Minuteman Project. Students rushed the stage of Roone Arledge Auditorium, shouting slogans and holding aloft banners. The Minutemen were effectively prevented from speaking.

[edit] In film

In the 2003 film Anger Management, Lerner Hall's facade was used to represent a hospital in Boston.

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