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GATHERING PLACE: Leaders Marin,
Gayle Christensen, Allison and Chang look forward
to the opening of the Graduate Student Center.
Linda Cicero |
summoned to an urgent meeting
with Gene Awakuni, vice provost for student affairs,
the two graduate students didn’t know what to
expect. “We thought, ‘What could be that
important?’” Grace Chang recalls.
The news was better than Chang, ’92, MS ’94,
and Lisa Marin could have imagined: thanks to a substantial
gift from John Arrillaga, the long-anticipated Graduate
Student Center suddenly was good to go. “Stunned
incredulity,” Chang says of her realization that
ground finally would be broken. “It was really
an incredible moment.”
Chang, a medical student and former chair of the Graduate
Student Council (GSC), and deputy chair Marin had spent
their year in office talking up the need for a center
with anyone who would listen, including the University
president and provost. Another item atop the list of
graduate student concerns: more on-campus housing. “I’ve
moved five times since I got here, and I still don’t
live on campus,” says Marin, a fifth-year graduate
student in biological sciences. “And that includes
spending three months on an ex-boyfriend’s couch.”
Her predicament is not unique: fewer than 60 percent
of graduate students live on the Farm, and a one-bedroom
apartment in Palo Alto costs an average of $1,126. Then
there’s the high cost and scarcity of child care
for the youngest of graduate students’ 500 children.
Monthly fees for infant care, for example, top $1,400
at campus day care centers.
Now, some of those concerns are being alleviated. Plans
for additional housing are under discussion. The provost
has begun meeting with graduate students and postdocs
to discuss the child-care crunch. And Arrillaga, ’60,
stepped forward last April with an offer to pay the
costs of architectural drawings and construction for
the $3.75 million community center.
When it opens—as early as July, or in September
at the latest—the new center on Escondido Road
should be a magnet for graduate students housed on and
off campus. “Most graduate students either live
in the east village area, or commute out that way,”
Marin says. “So it should be very convenient to
have the facility there, where families can walk over
with their kids.”
Modeled on the Arrillaga Alumni Center, the two-story
Graduate Student Center will have 12,000 square feet
of space for meetings and general hanging out. The first-floor
pub will serve finger foods and hot meals provided by
Stanford Dining Services, “and, yes, we’re
hoping to obtain a liquor license so alcohol can be
served,” says Awakuni. A hardwood, multipurpose
room across from the pub will be available for dinners,
dances or aerobic classes. Upstairs, a large-screen
TV will be the focus of activity, surrounded by pool
and/or foosball tables and plenty of couches. On the
same floor: a copy center, computer room, children’s
play area with toys and kid-size furniture, plus administrative
offices and conference and meeting rooms.
“Mr. Arrillaga basically is designing the shell
of the building—stairways, bathrooms, elevators
and major exterior walls—but what goes on inside
has been left more to the users,” says Steve Allison,
current GSC chair. “We’re going to be able
to walk into that building and say, ‘This is an
idea students had.’ ”
Plans are more preliminary for housing adjacent to
the Law School that would accommodate many of its 580
students. Most already live on campus, but they are
not grouped in a dorm near the law quad, as is the case
at some other top schools. A survey two years ago also
confirmed some students were commuting from the East
Bay and San Francisco because of housing costs in the
Palo Alto area, says Frank Brucato, senior associate
dean of finance and chief financial officer for the
Law School. “If we had to guess where the future
would be in the next 10 to 20 years, in terms of how
law schools will be competing for students, we think
it could be in housing.”
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