SPRAB reviews plans for a new Princeton University Health Services building
SPRAB reviews plans for a new Princeton University Health Services building
Princeton University has proposed a project that would construct a more than 76,000-square-foot University Health Services building on campus.
The university presented plans for the proposed project to Princeton’s Site Plan Review Advisory Board (SPRAB) on July 14.
SPRAB Chair Louisa Clayton, Vice Chair Lisa Levine, Councilman David Cohen, Ingela Kostenbader, and Anne Soos voted “yes” to move the proposed plan forward in the municipal process.
Barbara Vadnais was the sole dissenting vote.
A new Health Services building would replace McCosh Health Center, which is currently more than 35,000 square feet in size.
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Let us be the generation that ends exclusionary zoning
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Lydia and Bill Addy ’82 make gift to support undergraduate student expansion
by the Office of Advancement
April 7, 2021 noon
Photo by Jake Dean
Lydia B. and William M. Addy ’82 have made a major gift to support Princeton University’s strategic goal of undergraduate student expansion by naming Addy Hall, a dormitory in one of the new residential colleges being built on campus.
“Bill and Lydia Addy embrace service and philanthropy, both in their local community and at Princeton,” said President Christopher L. Eisgruber ’83. “The University has been fortunate to have them as partners who understand the importance of our residential college system as well as the transformational role a Princeton education provides for our students. We are deeply grateful to Bill and Lydia for their support and its impact on generations of students who will live in Addy Hall.”
February 14, 2021
February 13, 2021
POV: Spring classes have just started. You’re finally out of arrival quarantine, so you have unlocked the ability to take your daily walks off campus. But you don’t. Sure, there’s the occasional trek up to Nassau Street for a stop at Small World or Tico’s, or sometimes you stroll around the neighborhood behind McCarter Theatre for some scenic variety. More often, you stick to the well-worn footpaths through Prospect Garden, wander among the Rocky courtyards, or perhaps trek all the way down to Poe Field to reminisce or wonder about what campus used to look like without all this new-fangled construction.