Rensselaer Campus Map 1 66

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Rensselaer Campus Map 1 66 ABCDEFGH Hoosick Street Route 7 Georgian Court 65 1 Rensselaer Campus Map 1 66 Detroit Avenue Campus Facilities Key Georgian Terrace dE Beman g e Bri 61 ih nsm l l eT ade Lan r r Academics & Research a c e e Seventeenth Street Burdett Avenue Blatchford Drive 62 Beman Lane eT Student Life r r a c 2 Robison e A 60 2 Field Renwyck Rugby Student Housing ve Fields Field g Dri B Administration & Operations Kellog 59 C E ace err T Fift D eenth Sunset Stadium Forsyth Drive Str Harkness 90 eet Field Field Willie 3 Stanton 3 Samaritan Field Hospital E 89 S U O H I N M U Peoples Avenue 52 Peck L Peoples Av enue Dri A ve F R Fourteenth Street IE T L Ninth Street E Eleventh Str D enth HOU N SE F L FIE Eighth Street 33 91 OT L D F 51 Cook S HO 55 E Str 30 69 US J LOT 32 L E H Dri OT eet S FIELD HOUSE LOTS ve eet 49 Federa l S treet 28 31 77 53 Colv 54 4 in C McLeod Road ircle 4 d 50 Sun 27 Roa 53 Sage Sherry set NORTH LOT d Av 29 Roa T enu on erra e Anderson Eat Field ce 9 8 WEST LOT 2 Sage Avenue 34 T O L 12 D 7 10 R Six 11 Y 5 R Gri e th HER Fifteenth Street swold Ro S 71 Ave 1 6 57 enu Av nue 4 its ’86 35 ad Sage Avenue 5 85 78 Field 58 Tibb 5 3 13 73 79 26 24 “ 25 G 36 a 47 48 r n VISITOR e t PARKING D o 18 14 15 u 46 40 alg 17 72 ss B a l 39 t mi 23 22 o 37 r e W Bu a rdett Aven ”y 19 74 Doyle 45 41 Middle School 76 38 AS&RCLOT ue 6 44 42 21 68 Robison 6 20 Memorial 43 Field ACADEMY 67 75 HALL LOT College Avenue Bou ton Troy College Aven ue Ro Fift ad High School 81 eenth Congress S treet 80 S t r ee t t 7 Co e ng Tibbits Aven ress tre ue 7 St S r th ee n t e e Fift 86 ABCDEFGH # Building Name Map Location # Building Name Map Location # Building Name Map Location 67 Academy Hall (Financial Aid, Student Life 68 Empire State Hall 6C 60 Radio Club W2SZ 2H Services Center, Health Center) 6D 18 Engineering Center, J. Erik Jonsson 5C 53 Rensselaer Apartment Housing Project 34 Admissions 5E 76 Experimental Media & Performing Arts Center RAHP A Site (Single Students) 4G 32 Alumni House (Heffner) 4C (EMPAC) 6B 62 Rensselaer Apartment Housing Project 37 Alumni Sports & Recreation Center 6D 52 Field House, Houston 3F RAHP B Site (Married Students) 2H 26 Amos Eaton Hall 5B 23 Folsom Library 6B 35 Rensselaer Union 5D 73 Barton Hall 5E 91 Graduate Education, 1516 Peoples Avenue 4D 10 Ricketts Building 5C 69 Beman Park Firehouse 4D 24 Greene Building 5C 38 Robison Swimming Pool 6D 29 Blaw-Knox 1 & 2 4C 57 Greenhouses and Grounds Barn 5G 81 RPI Ambulance 7C 85 Blitman Residence Commons 5A 11 ’87 Gymnasium 5C 13 Russell Sage Dining Hall 5D 5 Boiler House, Sage Avenue 5B 31 H Building 4C 6 Russell Sage Laboratory 5B 77 Boiler House, 11th Street 4C 46 Hall Hall 6E 19 Science Center, Jonsson-Rowland (Hirsch Observatory) 6C 48 Bray Hall 5E 30 J Building 4C 55 Seismograph Laboratory4H 61 Bryckwyck 2H 80 Java++ Cafe, 1527 Fifteenth Street 7D 28 Service Building 4B 51 2144 Burdett Avenue 4F 25 Lally Hall 5B 43 Sharp Hall 6E 50 Burdett Avenue Residence Hall 4F 58 LINAC Facility (Gaerttner Laboratory) 5H 59 Stacwyck Apartments 2H 3 Carnegie Building 5B 79 Louis Rubin Memorial Approach 5A 59A Rousseau Apartments 2H 47 Cary Hall 5E 21 Materials Research Center (MRC) 6B 59B Williams Apartments 2H 74 Center for Biotechnology and 72 Mueller Center 6D 59C Wiltsie Apartments 2H Interdisciplinary Studies (CBIS) 6D 41 Nason Hall 6E 59D McGiffert Apartments 2H 14 Center for Industrial Innovation, Low (CII) 5D 27 41 Ninth Street 4B 59E Thompson Apartments 2H 49 Chapel and Cultural Center 4E 8 North Hall 5C 71 133 Sunset Terrace 5G 20 Cogswell Laboratory 6C 44 Nugent Hall 6E 54 200 Sunset Terrace 4H 66 Colonie Apartments 1F 75 Parking Garage (Faculty/Staff) 6C 7 Troy Building 5C 39 Commons Dining Hall 6E 65 Patroon Manor 1H 22 Voorhees Computing Center (VCC) 6C 40 Crockett Hall 5E 33 2021 Peoples Avenue 4D 4 Walker Laboratory 5B 17 Darrin Communications Center (DCC) 6C 1 Pittsburgh Building 5B 45 Warren Hall 6E 42 Davison Hall 6E 15 Playhouse 5D 2 West Hall 5B 9 E Complex 5C 86 Polytechnic Residence Commons 7D 78 Winslow Building 5A 89 East Campus Athletic Village Arena (ECAV) 3G 36 Public Safety 5D 90 East Campus Athletic Village Stadium 3G 12 Quadrangle Complex 5D.
Recommended publications
  • Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Alumni Magazine Fall 2018
    NON PROFIT ORG U.S. POSTAGE PAID RENSSELAER Alumni Magazine | Fall 2018 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute POLYTECHNIC 110 8th Street INSTITUTE Troy, NY 12180-3590 CURTIS R. PRIEM EXPERIMENTAL MEDIA AND PERFORMING ARTS CENTER AT RENSSELAER EMPAC.RPI.EDU CELEBRATING 10 YEARS OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDIA AND PERFORMING ARTS SNAPSHOTS FROM EXPANDING EXPERIMENTS WITH THE OPENING OF THE CURTIS R. PRIEM EXPERIMENTAL MEDIA AND PERFORMING ARTS CENTER ON OCTOBER 3, 2008, RENSSELAER OPENED THE DOORS TO A THE STUDIOS DATA DIMENSIONS IN TIME NEW ERA OF CROSS-DISCIPLINARY RESEARCH AND PRODUCTION AT THE CONFLUENCE OF ART, SCIENCE, AND TECHNOLOGY. ON THE COVER: Researchers at Rensselaer are perfecting network analysis, a powerful data science technique that makes it possible to identify common ground in complex datasets. www.rpi.edu/magazine VICE PRESIDENT FOR STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS AND EXTERNAL RELATIONS Richie Hunter ASSOCIATE VICE PRESIDENT FOR MARKETING AND COMMUNICATIONS Pamela Smith MANAGING EDITOR Tracey Leibach ALUMNI NEWS EDITOR Meg Gallien CONTRIBUTORS Ellen Johnston Mary Martialay Josh Potter PHOTOGRAPHERS & ILLUSTRATORS New research improves nature’s tools for digesting plastic. See page 22. Martin Benjamin Ray Felix Mark McCarty FEATURES Kris Qua DESIGN 24 Snapshots From the Studios Lauren Marchese With a broad and interdisciplinary approach to education, the School of Architecture is Wendy Wineriter Jim Beneduci preparing its students to design a better future. 32 Experiments in Time Since the ribbon cutting for the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts MOVING? Center on Oct. 3, 2008, EMPAC has helped forge a new paradigm for cross-disciplinary Update your address via email at alum. research and production on campus while positioning Rensselaer as a major player in the [email protected], or write to: Rensselaer international art world.
    [Show full text]
  • 2013 DL Art Science Conference Program.Pdf
    Across Boundaries, Across Abilities Deep Listening Institute, Ltd. 77 Cornell St, Suite 303 PO Box 1956 Kingston, NY 12401 www.deeplistening.org [email protected] facebook.com/deep.listener Twitter @DeepListening What is Deep Listening? There’s more to listening than meets the ear. Pauline Oliveros describes Deep Listening as “listening in every possible way to everything possible to hear no matter what one is doing.” Basically Deep Listening, as developed by Oliveros, explores the difference between the involuntary nature of hearing and the voluntary, selective nature – exclusive and inclusive -- of listening. The practice includes bodywork, sonic meditations, interactive performance, listening to the sounds of daily life, nature, one’s own thoughts, imagination and dreams, and listening to listening itself. It cultivates a heightened awareness of the sonic environment, both external and internal, and promotes experimentation, improvisation, collaboration, playfulness and other creative skills vital to personal and community growth. ; 2 Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) Troy, New York My hope is to inspire scientific inquiry and research on listening as well as to bring the world community together to share ideas and practice Deep Listening. --Pauline Oliveros, Founder of Deep Listening Institute Dear Conference Attendees, I am extremely pleased to welcome you to Deep Listening: Art/Science, the First International Conference on Deep Listening! This three-day event will feature an amazing array of lectures, workshops, posters and experience-focused presentations on a number of topics related to the art and science of listening. This includes many distinguished and long-time members of the Deep Listening community as well as a host of scholars and creators who approach listening from unique perspectives.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rensselaer Polytechnic
    Wednesday, October 18, 2017 Volume CXXXVIII, No. 7 • poly.rpi.edu FEATURES Page 12SPORTS Page 4 EDITORIAL Page 8 Elena Composting has Perez many benefits Anahit Networking and Hovhannisyan competition at MS&T Sheer Idiocy puts on 20th Football wins against Staff Fence offensive, anniversary show Ithaca College Editorial encouraged protest ‘Build bridges, not fences’ Sidney Kochman/The Polytechnic Brookelyn Parslow The protest originated outside & Homecoming event guests; Before the protest, Director of Senior Reporter of the fences enclosing the south this also included the closing of Public Safety Jerry Matthews asked side of campus. It was initial- the tunnel connecting the Jons- reporters of The Poly to vacate the “WE DESERVE TRANSPARENCY,” ly scheduled to take place next son Engineering Center and the area inside the fence, saying that chanted students during a peaceful to the Experimental Media and Jonsson-Rowland Science Center. it was restricted to people with demonstration that began between Performing Arts Center, the loca- In an email to The Poly, Vice Presi- credentials from the Division of Amos Eaton Hall and Lally Hall at tion of the spring 2016 protest. dent of Administration Claude Institute Advancement. 4 pm on Friday, October 13, 2017. However, temporary barriers erect- Rounds stated that the tunnel At 4:30 pm, a portion of the fence Earlier that day, the Save the ed by the Institute and entry restric- “does not serve as a required was moved by demonstrators as they Union organization emailed an tions enforced by the Department fire exit for either [the] JEC or migrated onto the grass on the north invitation to the demonstration, or of Public Safety prevented demon- JRSC,” “the gate in the tunnel is side of the Voorhees Computing “lab safety class,” to the Rensselaer strators from reaching EMPAC.
    [Show full text]
  • 11Th Annual Black Family Technology Awareness Day
    11TH ANNUAL BLACK FAMILY TECHNOLOGY AWARENESS DAY Saturday, February 7, 2009 Darrin Communications Center, Great Hall 8:15 A.M. through 5:00 P.M. 11th Annual Black Family Technology Awareness Day February 7, 2009 Each year, area students and their families come to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to participate in the annual Black Family Technology Awareness Day event. The event is designed to excite area young people and their families to consider pursuing careers in the fields of science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM) fields, and the arts. The annual event is hosted by the Office of Institute Diversity and Academic Outreach Programs at Rensselaer. Rensselaer’s Black Family Technology Awareness Day is part of a nationally celebrated week of the same name. The theme for 2009 is “The World is Mine.” The event is scheduled for Saturday, February 7, 2009 on the Rensselaer campus located in Troy, New York. Schedule of Events 8:15–9:00 a.m. Registration opens – Darrin Communications Center (DCC) Great Hall 9:00–9:45 a.m. Welcome and Opening Keynote Speaker – Darrin Communications Center (DCC) Great Hall 10:00–10:45 a.m. Workshops – various campus locations. 11:00–11:45 a.m. Workshops – various campus locations. 12:00–1:15 p.m Lunch – Darrin Communications Center (DCC) Great Hall. 1:30–2:15 p.m. Workshops – various campus locations. 2:30–3:15 p.m. Workshops – various campus locations. 3:30–5:00 p.m. Closing session, give-a-ways and computer raffle – Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC) Concert Hall Black Family Technology Awareness Day features more than 20 workshops — led by Rensselaer professors, students, and community organizations — that include using solar energy and fuel cells in cars, hearing about the future of lighting, making ice cream using liquid nitrogen, learning how to use basic forensic science techniques, discovering the artistic effects of evaporation, and exploring how plastic products are made via hands-on interactive science experiments, among others.
    [Show full text]
  • RPI Science News
    Science News Vol. 2 July 2008 No. 7 T HE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER OF RENSSELAER POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE’S SCHOOL OF SCIENCE EFFECTS OF ACID RAIN ON MICROORGANISMS IN LAKES Researchers have long known that acid rain can severely decrease the diversity of plant and animal communities in lakes and ponds. However, little is known about how microscopic bacteria, which form the foundation of freshwater ecosystems, respond to acidification. To address this knowledge gap, researchers at RPI’s Darrin Fresh Water Institute have developed one of the most comprehensive databases in existence on the impacts of acid rain on microorganisms. “Thanks in large part to the federal Clean Air Act and increased state focus on improving air quality here in New York, we are seeing a number of these lakes on a trajectory to recovery, but up until now we have had little understanding of the changing biodiversity of microbial communities within the impacted lakes as they recover,” said Sandra Nierzwicki-Bauer, director of the Darrin Fresh Water Institute and professor of biology at Rensselaer. “I hope this study will help other scientists expand on the research and use this data to uncover additional information on how acid-impacted lakes and their ecosystems are recovering and how we can hasten that process.” More info → http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2461 THE MAP THAT CHANGED THE WORLD Dr. Gerald Friedman, Professor Emeritus of Sedimentology and Geohistory at Rensselaer, and his wife, Sue Friedman, recently donated three very special books to RPI. One of the books is quite rare and famous, written by William Smith, a founding father of modern geology, best known for his study of strata.
    [Show full text]
  • Station Description Location Map All Hours Clearskyhours Cloud(Over) Transparency(0-5 Clear) Seeing(0-5 Excellent) Wind(Kmh)
    Station Description Location Map All_Hours ClearSkyHours Cloud(over) Transparency(0-5_clear) Seeing(0-5_excellent) Wind(kmh) Humidity(%) Temperature(degC) TimeZone(hoursFromUTC) Bortle_Scale PixelRed PixelGreen PixelBlue CffvllALcsp.txt Coffeeville Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=31.75775&lng=-88.0897&zoom=6 2001 1054 28.9 3.2 3.3 11.1 75.8 17.4 -6 2 39 39 39 EntrprsALcsp.txt Enterprise Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=31.315&lng=-85.855&zoom=6 2031 1030 29.2 3 3.4 13.7 76.1 17.1 -6 5 243 127 0 ShoalsALcsp.txt The Shoals Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=34.791532&lng=-87.656651&zoom=6 1967 1154 28.4 3.3 3.4 14.4 74.6 14.2 -6 5 243 0 0 OkMtnSPALcsp.txt Oak Mountain State Park Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=33.322657&lng=-86.752408&zoom=6 2039 1093 30.1 3.3 3.4 11.1 75.9 15.2 -6 5 243 127 0 MrsFryALcsp.txt Millers Ferry Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=32.099&lng=-87.368&zoom=6 2010 1063 28.2 3.1 3.3 10.8 74.6 17.1 -6 2 39 39 39 LktObALcsp.txt Lookout Observatory Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=34.54162&lng=-85.53514&zoom=6 2009 1090 30.3 3.2 3.3 10.9 77.7 13.3 -5 4 0 243 0 MobileALcsp.txt Mobile Regional Airport Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=30.69167&lng=-88.24278&zoom=6 2049 1126 26.8 3 3.5 13.4 82.1 17.5 -6 5 243 0 0 DothanAlcsp.txt Dothan Alabama http://www.jshine.net/astronomy/dark_sky/index.php?lat=31.223&lng=-85.391&zoom=6
    [Show full text]
  • 12Th Annual Black Family Technology Awareness Day
    12TH ANNUAL BLACK FAMILY TECHNOLOGY AWARENESS DAY Saturday, February 6, 2010 Darrin Communications Center, Great Hall 8:15 A.M. through 4:30 P.M. 12th Annual Black Family Technology Awareness Day February 6, 2010 Black Family Technology Awareness Day, hosted by the Office of Institute Diversity and Academic Outreach Programs at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, is designed to interest area young people and their families in pursuing occupations in the fields of science, technology, engineering, mathematics (STEM) fields, and the arts. The event is scheduled for Saturday, February 6, 2010 on the campus of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. Schedule of Events 8:15–9:00 a.m. Registration opens Darrin Communications Center (DCC) Great Hall. 9:00–9:45 a.m. Welcome and Opening Keynote Speaker Darrin Communications Center (DCC) 308. 10:00–11:00 a.m. Workshops (various campus locations) 11:15 a.m.–12:15 p.m. Workshops (various campus locations) 12:30–1:30 p.m. Lunch Darrin Communications Center (DCC) Great Hall. 1:45–2:45 p.m. Workshops (various campus locations) 3:00–4:30 p.m. Closing ceremonies, give-a-ways and computer raffle Darrin Communications Center (DCC) 308). Black Family Technology Awareness Day features workshops led by Rensselaer professors, students, alumni and community organizations. Rensselaer President Shirley Ann Jackson, Ph.D. has long warned of what she has dubbed a “Quiet Crisis” in America, the threat to the capacity of the United States to innovate due to reduced support for research and the looming shortage in the nation’s science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce.
    [Show full text]
  • Eastern New York Chapter of the Association for Bridge Construction & Design, Inc
    Eastern New York Chapter of the Association for Bridge Construction & Design, Inc. th “Celebrating our 25 Anniversary – Established in 1994” April 2019 SPECIAL EVENT – RPI STUDENT PRESENTATIONS Date/Time: Wednesday, April 3, 2019 6:30 PM Pizza Dinner / Networking 7:15 PM. Listen to Senior Presentations 8:00 PM Q&A, Discussion with Students Associate Sponsors Location: Russell Sage Dining Hall, RPI Campus Barton and Loguidice, DPC Troy, NY 12180 (See attached RPI Campus Map, limited parking) Bergmann Associates CHA Consulting, Inc. Creighton Manning Eng., LLP Topic/Speaker: Keeseville Suspension Bridge DA Collins Construction Co., Inc. Greenman-Pedersen, Inc. Presented by RPI Student Chapter of ASCE McLaren Engineering Group MJ Eng. & Land Surveying, PC Moretrench American Corporation Pennoni Associates, Inc. Piasecki Steel Construction Corp. Reale Construction Co., Inc. Call to the membership for volunteers to assist RPI students with their technical Ryan Biggs/Clark Davis Eng. & presentation and allow them to gain exposure in public speaking and critique from Surveying, DPC STS Steel, Inc. professionals in their field of interest. The students will be presenting on an 1888 The Fort Miller Co., Inc. pedestrian suspension bridge in Keeseville (exit 34 of the Northway). The Eastern Chapter of ABCD will be providing pizza and refreshments to all that volunteer. This is also a good chance to network with future engineers that will be entering the field Contributing Sponsors Christopher A. Waite, PE Cost (per person) No Cost to Membership
    [Show full text]
  • 9817 Campus Map.Qxd
    RPI Parking for Golds The gates go up at noon on Friday, March 14 so folks can use the North Lot (The pool is #38 and north lot is behind buildings 8 & 9) but they must use the spaces painted with yellow paint. Gates will be up at both side of the lot (the map shows one entrance just below building 8 … the second entrance is next to building 32). There are no shuttles running during spring break but it's not a huge walk. Leave the lot taking the path between building 9 and Anderson Field, down the stairs in front of building 9 and turn left walking back up to 15th street. Turn right on 15th street and the pool is ahead on the left. ROBISON FIELD Tom P he lan Pl ace “G ar ne t D ou gl as s B al tim o re S tr ee t” CAMPUS MAP KEY (IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER) 133 Sunset Terrace 71 Boiler House 5 Experimental Media J Building / Nuclear Engineering Rensselaer Union 35 200 Sunset Terrace 54 Boiler House, 11th St 77 and Performing Arts Incubator Center 30 and Science Building 58 Ricketts Building 10 Center (EMPAC) 76 2005 Tibbits Avenue 56 Bray Hall 48 J. Erik Jonsson Nugent Hall 44 Robison Pool 38 Financial Aid 67 Engineering Center 18 2021 Fifteenth Street 33 Bryckwyck Parking Structure 75 Russell Sage Dining Hall 13 Folsom Library 23 Java ++ 2144 Burdett Avenue 51 (285 Sunset Terrace) 61 Patroon Manor Russell Sage Laboratory 6 Gaerttner Laboratory 58 (1527 Fifteenth Street) 80 (1 Detroit Drive) 65 Academy Hall – Student Burdett Residence Hall 50 Science Center, Jonsson-Rowland Life Services Center 67 Carnegie Building 3 Gallagher Health Center
    [Show full text]