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CA CAC 58-1-279 · Subseries · between 1980 and 1981
Part of Moshe Safdie

Located on a triangular parcel, Cambridge Center was designed as a mixed-use development project in an area known as Kendall Square. Safdie's master plan called for several mid- and high-rise office and research buildings, a 25-storey hotel, and a street-level retail centre. The hotel encloses Cambridge Plaza and is the primary public focal point of the complex. The plaza paving and features were designed by world-renowned artist Karl Schlamminger of Germany.

Safdie Architects
CA CAC 58-1-366 · Subseries · between 1984 and 1992
Part of Moshe Safdie

This nondenominational sacred and meditative building juxtaposes two very different spaces. A terraced garden rich in flowering trees offers a place for personal contemplation. Through its glazed, pyramidal roof visitors see the changing seasons of the campus outside. A 100-seat sanctuary contained by rounded, apselike concrete walls, rises to a height of 27 feet. For maximum flexibility this sanctuary room has no dominant axis; it frequently functions as a home for musical performances of varying sizes. Skylights flood the walls with light from above and large-scale prisms fixed in the skylights refract the sun's full spectrum. The exterior of the building is a cylindrical oxidized copper drum penetrated on the west by the garden space. A tower timepiece marks the entrance to the chapel.

Simple moves of form and orientation combine to create a unique place for contemplation and gathering in a busy campus setting. Skylights and prisms wash glowing patterns of light across the chapel walls throughout the course of the day.

Safdie Architects
CA OSLER P417-3-2-100-102 · Item · May 23, 1904
Part of Harvey Cushing Fonds

Letter to Frederick Cheever Shattuck from Charles W. Eliot, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. Eliot would like Osler to spend a year at Harvard as the endowed professor of Hygiene. The duties of the position are yet to be invented; the University hopes that Osler will be the man to invent them.

Eliot, Charles W.