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Building
Hyde Hall Building Spaces Special Features Historic Ground
Hyde Hall
Building Spaces
Octagonal in shape, suffused with light on all sides and from the
cupola above, this room is designed and appointed for its principal
use: providing space for conversations about learning and teaching,
research and creative projects, ideas and images and the Institute for
the Arts and Humanities' public missions to the state, the nation and
humankind.
Incubator
The incubator provides space for Fellows, faculty and alumni to work
individually in cubicles or collaboratively in small groups on specific
projects that advance their work, address larger societal needs and
explore issues of importance to the university community.
Kitchen-Common Room
The kitchen is the daily social center of the Institute, a
place where Fellows and their guests are invited to bring bag
lunches at noon to share conversation and sustain the community.
Seminar Room This technology-enabled space on the second floor of Hyde Hall
provides working space for inter-disciplinary professional
collaboration and work for small groups associated with the
University.
The largest space in the building, the University Room is so named
to honor the chancellor and trustees of the university, who designated
the location on McCorkle Place for Hyde Hall.
Special Features
Brick
Hyde Hall is clad in distressed Park Ridge brick and Tryon accent
brick from the Old Carolina Brick Co. of Salisbury, N.C., with Mortar
#407 and Bluff River pre-cast. The order to Old Carolina Brick was for
“90,000 brick, hand made.”
Cupola
The light illuminating the cupola is kept bright day and night as a
reminder of one of the two key terms in the university's guiding
principles. “Lux,” the practice of the liberties of discourse, respect
for different points of view and openness to revisions of opinion enact
its companion term, “Libertas,” liberty, which is necessary for the
light of knowledge and knowledge necessary for the discipline of
liberty.
The "conversation" sculpture commemorates the retirement of IAH founder Ruel Tyson. Connoisseur and collector of rocks and pebbles, Tyson created the Institute as a place where faculty engage in conversation with colleagues across disciplines. The sculpture comprises three large stones stacked on top of each other. A fourth stone near the walkway at sitting height invites passersby to pause and engage in "conversation." The sculpture was created by acclaimed sculptor Thomas Sayre of Raleigh, N.C., a Morehead Scholar and UNC-Chapel Hill graduate of English and studio art, a Public IAH Fellow and friend of Tyson.
Fellows of the Institute, Advisory Board members and members of the
staff were invited to contribute to the time capsule, which resides
behind its plaque on the west wall of the chimney.
Weathervane
The owl weathervane was handcrafted by Enrique Vega. |
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