| More
than 100 years ago, officials at what was then known as St. Edward’s
College in Austin, Texas, envisioned a new building to meet the
needs of the growing school. Over the years, the quietly unassuming
all-purpose building, called Exhibition Hall, became home to numerous
university activities including a theater, an engineering and machine
shop, and even a World War II firing range. Finally, at the end
of the war, the hall was dismantled, moved across campus and converted
to Our Lady Queen of Peace Chapel. For nearly 60 years, the modest
wood-frame chapel has served as the spiritual center of campus.
Today, 108 years
after the construction of Exhibition Hall, university officials
are once again envisioning a new structure to meet the demands of
the burgeoning campus. However, the mission of this new building
is certain — a $5 million chapel that will be home to the
Holy Cross Institute and Campus Ministry in the heart of campus.
The new chapel will serve as the visible expression of the university’s
commitment to its Holy Cross heritage and Catholic identity by providing
opportunities for religious studies and participation in Campus
Ministry, as well as an environment in which freely chosen beliefs
can be deepened and expressed.
The new chapel
will be designed by internationally acclaimed and award-winning
architect Rick Joy of Rick Joy Architects based in Tucson, Ariz.
Joy, winner of the 2004 National Design Award in Architecture from
the Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, was chosen after a yearlong selection
process that had been narrowed to a field of three prominent American
architecture firms.
“The
selection of Rick Joy as architect for the Holy Cross Institute
and Chapel reflects both our commitment to the creation of a sacred
space filled with warmth and beauty and our aspiration to build
nationally distinguished buildings on our campus,” said Melba
Whatley, chair of the facilities committee of the St. Edward’s
University Board of Trustees.
“Rick
Joy has an uncanny ability to understand sacred space, and has the
depth of vision necessary to capture our Holy Cross character,”
said Father RickWilkinson, director of Campus Ministry and a member
of the selection committee, which visited each firm’s offices
and at least two completed projects. “My experience of his
work is that his designs allow visitors to touch the transcendent
in a subtle and engaging way. His innate use of nature, light, space
and sensory experience will enable us to collaboratively create
a chapel to serve the needs of campus.”
Upon
learning of his selection, Joy said, “I’m ecstatic and
totally committed to creating a deep and moving space that is both
spiritual and serene in its support of the mission of St. Edward’s.”
The award-winning architect known for his dramatic use of natural
landscape received the news of his selection while in Paris, where
he was lecturing at several architecture schools. “We will
work shoulder-to-shoulder with St. Edward’s to construct a
space that is iconic, graceful and sensitive to the place —
not by grand expression but through quiet emotion,” he added.
The new chapel
will be a warm and inviting signature building for St. Edward’s
— a symbol calling people to worship. Whether promoting a
sense of community through daily Mass or providing a place for quiet
contemplation, the chapel will play an integral role in campus life.
Because of its location — on a prominent hilltop in a busy
campus corridor — the chapel will take full advantage of the
expansive views of downtown Austin and the neighboring Texas Hill
Country.
As planned,
the chapel will house a 400-person sanctuary along with the offices
of Campus Ministry and the Holy Cross Institute. A joint initiative
of the university and the Holy Cross Brothers, the institute will
provide resources and programs for educators and lay members at
Holy Cross schools and universities across the country.
With the selection
process complete, the university will now move into a six-month
design process. St. Edward’s has already received a $1 million
lead gift commitment for the $5 million chapel from alumnus Charles
Kolodzey, ’36. In addition, the university has received a
$50,000 planning grant from the Scanlan Foundation of Houston, Texas.
The chapel is part of an overall campus master plan that will add
up to 12 new buildings to campus and help accommodate the institution’s
plans to double enrollment. Although focused on the future, the
master plan and the buildings it calls for are connected to the
university’s history. New facilities will reflect the high
design and planning standards set by St. Edward’s and architect
Nicolas Clayton, who designed the university’s landmark Main
Building in 1885.
About
Rick Joy Architects
Rick Joy, principal, established Rick Joy Architects in 1993 in
Tucson, Ariz., after earning a BArch from the University of Arizona
and completing a three-year internship with Will Bruder as one of
four designers of the celebrated Phoenix Central Library. Each of
Rick Joy Architects’ works has been exhibited and published
extensively and has won numerous awards. Most recently, Joy won
the prestigious 2004 National Design Award from the Smithsonian
Cooper-Hewitt and received the 2002 American Academy of Arts and
Letters Award in Architecture. He regularly serves as a professor
at
both the Harvard Graduate School of Design and at Rice University
and lectures internationally on his work. In 2002, Joy’s first
monograph, “Rick Joy: Desert Works,” was published.
It is the first in the Princeton Architecture Press/Graham Foundation
Invited New Voices in Architecture series and has become the press’s
best-seller.
The
10-member firm currently has six active residential commissions
in Arizona, California, Utah and Chilé, including the newest
home for Eleanor and Francis Ford Coppola in Napa, Calif. Joy also
is the managing partner of I-10 Studio, a separate architectural
firm developed in partnership with Marwan Al-Sayed and Wendell Burnette
specifically for their newest commission — an ultra-luxury
boutique eco-resort hotel and villas in southern Utah
Founded
by the Congregation of Holy Cross, St. Edward’s University
has been named as one of America’s Best Colleges for 2005
by U.S. News & World Report and was selected by The
Princeton Review for inclusion in the guide Colleges with a
Conscience. St. Edward’s is a private, Catholic, liberal
arts university of approximately 4,650 students located in Austin,
Texas.
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