Skip to Content
MIT Alumni News: President

Transformative spaces

New centers for music and design are taking shape on West Campus.

August 27, 2024
Sally Kornbluth
Gretchen Ertl

MIT people often find their greatest moments of inspiration in each other’s company. And two big, beautiful additions to West Campus now underway will open up new spaces for connection, collaboration, rigorous exploration, and joyful play. 

Stretching along Mass. Ave. and Vassar Street, the familiar brick face of the historic Metropolitan Storage Warehouse may evoke a medieval castle. But inside, an intriguing redesign is transforming this former warren of storage spaces into an open, light-filled new home for the School of Architecture and Planning and the MIT Morningside Academy for Design. 

The Met Warehouse will give faculty in SA+P an environment for teaching and research that matches their professional and creative excellence. And the building itself is a kind of pedagogical tool, as it celebrates the intersections of the historic brick structure and the fresh design ideas that animate it now. With its large, welcoming communal spaces, including an auditorium and a gallery, the “Met” is sure to become a new center of gravity and energy on campus.

And a new building will soon open its doors to support MIT’s flourishing music community. With Kresge Auditorium as its next-door neighbor, the building situates the experiences of making and enjoying music right at the heart of campus. Its optimized acoustical design and sound-insulating walls will be a gift to MIT’s conservatory-level musicians and talented beginners alike. And its beautiful performance hall will draw music-loving audiences from across campus and surrounding communities, exerting its own gravitational pull. 

The two new buildings—a renovated warehouse from 1895 and a brand-new structure—will invite our hands-on community to do more of what we love: designing and building, making and playing. They will offer new opportunities for everything from experimenting with 3D printing to learning how to restore landmark buildings to planning resilient cities; from classical orchestra to avant-garde jazz to Senegalese drumming. 

And they will help us infuse the lessons and logic of music and design across other disciplines too, expanding our thinking and practice in ways that will vastly improve our potential to solve society’s toughest problems. 

Transformative projects like these boost our community’s creativity, ingenuity, and resilience. As we reshape the campus, we inspire our community to reshape the world.

Keep Reading

Most Popular

Happy birthday, baby! What the future holds for those born today

An intelligent digital agent could be a companion for life—and other predictions for the next 125 years.

cross section of a head from the side and back with plus symbols scattered over to represent rejuvenated sections. The cast shadow of the head has a clock face.

This researcher wants to replace your brain, little by little

The US government just hired a researcher who thinks we can beat aging with fresh cloned bodies and brain updates.

person holding a phone wearing a wig with lipstick. The screen shows the OpenAi logo and voice icon

Here’s how people are actually using AI

Something peculiar and slightly unexpected has happened: people have started forming relationships with AI systems.

antique photo of a woman with stream of color emitting from where her face would be

The year is 2149 and …

Novelist Sean Michaels envisions what life will look like 125 years from now.

Stay connected

Illustration by Rose Wong

Get the latest updates from
MIT Technology Review

Discover special offers, top stories, upcoming events, and more.

Thank you for submitting your email!

Explore more newsletters

It looks like something went wrong.

We’re having trouble saving your preferences. Try refreshing this page and updating them one more time. If you continue to get this message, reach out to us at customer-service@technologyreview.com with a list of newsletters you’d like to receive.