Skip to content
Harvard Magazine
Editor’s Highlights

Sign up to be notified of new issues.

See a sample newsletter

Deep Dig

 
Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

This enormous excavation might tempt Virginia Lee Burton, who lived in Gloucester, Massachusetts, when she wrote Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel in 1939, to draft a sequel. The hole, shown in early summer, will accommodate two-thirds of the 137,000-square-foot Laboratory for Interface Science and Engineering, providing clean-room and vibration-free research space underground for work in materials science and nanotechnology.

This view, looking south toward the Science Center, shows the stout beams, slurry walls, and tiebacks used to hold up McKay Laboratory (on the left), where much of the Division of Engineering and Applied Sciences is housed, and the Music Building (on the right); construction for the new structure, at the bottom of the pit, had just begun. The above-grade part of the complex, on columnar stilts to allow pedestrian passage, will enclose a quadrangle in the courtyard north of the Science Center (the roof over the current hole), which will become a performance space.

Photograph by Jim Harrison

Even with much bigger equipment than Mike’s steam shovel (and help from many sidewalk superintendents), it took many days longer, and millions of dollars more, to get down this deep than to dig the cellar for the new Popperville town hall in the children’s story. And an even bigger excavation has just begun a couple of blocks north, beyond the Museum of Comparative Zoology, for the 460,000-square-foot Northwest Building, a multidisciplinary laboratory complex. For views of above-ground summer construction, please see "The Shrouds of Cambridge."

 

Forward this page to a friend
Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has forwarded a page to you from Harvard Magazine
(Your Name) thought you would like to see this page from the Harvard Magazine web site.

Issues > September-October 2005 > John Harvard's Journal

September-October 2005

Diversity Director

September-October 2005

"I can no longer support the president"

September-October 2005

A Sensitive Census

September-October 2005

Allston Options and Actions

September-October 2005

Catherine Dulac

September-October 2005

A Robust Decade at the Business School

September-October 2005

A New Dean at HBS

September-October 2005

University Housing on the Rise

September-October 2005

Yesterday's News

September-October 2005

A Humanist Who Knows Corn Flakes

September-October 2005

Provost Positions

September-October 2005

The Shrouds of Cambridge

September-October 2005

Congo Report

September-October 2005

Scanning Species

September-October 2005

Brevia

September-October 2005

Women in the Sciences

September-October 2005

Head Booter

September-October 2005

Shielding the Goal

September-October 2005

The Long Goodbye

September-October 2005

2005-2006 Ledecky Fellows

Add a new comment

Your email address is kept private and will not be shown publicly
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <ul> <ol> <li> <blockquote>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • SmartyPants will translate ASCII punctuation characters into “smart” typographic punctuation HTML entities.

More information about formatting options

Copyright ©1996–2008
Harvard Magazine Inc.
Contact the webmaster

adverisements