人妻少妇专区

Skip to content
人妻少妇专区 Life

Wilson Commons, designed by I.M. Pei, remains a centerpiece of campus life

Wilson Commons under construction on the River 人妻少妇专区. 鈥淚t will be a place to be, and a place to remember,鈥 architect I.M. Pei predicted. (Photo courtesy of the Department of Rare Books, Special Collections, and Preservation)

For decades, the I.M. Pei鈥揹esigned building has been a place to study, eat, dance, play billiards or violin, put out a newspaper, and even stage a student protest or two.

When a $9.5 million student union opened on the River 人妻少妇专区 on April 4, 1976, three months before the United States Bicentennial celebration, the building鈥檚 famed architect, I.M. Pei, offered a vision to match his grand design.

鈥淚t will be a place to be, and a place to remember,鈥 Pei predicted. 鈥淯ltimately, you will be the judge.鈥

Today, the building, Wilson Commons, has become a centerpiece of campus life鈥攁 place to study, eat, dance, drink coffee (and, at one time, beer), get a haircut, play billiards or violin, put out a weekly newspaper, and even stage a student protest or two.

鈥淲ilson Commons is one of the few places on campus that is truly indicative of our student body鈥檚 diversity,鈥 says Samantha Lish 鈥16, a double major in public health and English from South Salem, New York. As administrative chair of the 人妻少妇专区 Activities Board, Lish says she has spent more time at Wilson Commons than any building on campus. 鈥淚鈥檝e pulled all-nighters in the CAB office working on last-minute Dandelion Day plans and spent hours in Starbucks,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ome of my fondest memories have been in Wilson Commons.鈥

Another architectural feather in the cap of I.M. Pei

Peggy Wilson and I.M. Pei stand inside Wilson Commons.
Peggy Wilson (left) and I.M. Pei in the Pei鈥揹esigned building at the 人妻少妇专区 that would bear the name of the Wilson Family.

Perhaps best known by its honeycombed windows, which were laid diagonally to put the tower of Rush Rhees Library in focus, Wilson Commons is shaped like a trapezoid鈥攔umors have persisted for years that it was built to look like a giant pinball machine.

Pei said he took 鈥減articular pleasure in seeing the building used in the way Mr. Joseph Wilson had envisioned it and in a way we designed it: as the center of University life.鈥

鈥淭hat is the landmark center of identity,鈥 the Chinese-American architect, who died in 2019, said. Today, I.M. Pei buildings include the John F. Kennedy Library in Boston, the Bank of China Tower in Hong Kong, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, and the Louvre Pyramid in Paris.

鈥淚t will be a place to be, and a place to remember,鈥 I.M. Pei predicted of Wilson Commons.

Pei wanted an open look for the building, commenting in 1976 that 鈥渢here鈥檚 nothing more static and oppressive than large, monumental windowless space.鈥

He brought in plenty of trees and plants, believing that people would 鈥渃ongregate if nature is brought inside.鈥 That desire led to some fame鈥攁nd a little mystery鈥攚hen the building celebrated its 10-year anniversary in 1986.

础听 that year ranked Wilson Commons as the second-best student union in the country, behind the University of Texas. The article included a cartoon with a lizard wearing a Rochester sweatshirt.

When Wilson Commons opened,聽podocarpus聽trees were shipped in from Florida but failed to acclimate and soon died.聽As the legend goes, one of the trees showed up bearing a lizard, who scampered off to campus parts unknown.

鈥淣obody knows today exactly where the little guy wandered off to,鈥 Rochester spokeswoman Jan Fitzpatrick said in 1986, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 reassuring to know that he or she has achieved immortality in the聽New York Times.鈥

side-by-side images of Wilson Commons, an I.M. Pei building, being constructed.
Wilson Commons being built on the River 人妻少妇专区 in the 1970s.

An integral part of student life through the years

A hub of campus dining, the eateries in Wilson Commons in recent years feature everything from burgers, chicken tenders, and fries to burrito bowls, orange chicken, pizza, and soups, salads, and desserts in a ground-level area now known as 鈥淭he Commons.鈥 Rocky鈥檚 Sub Shop & Lounge is located on the ground floor in what was previously the Rathskeller (1976-86), the Common Ground Caf茅 (1986-90), Backdoor Pizza (1990), the Common Ground Caf茅 again (1990-2007), The Hive (2007-14), and then Rocky鈥檚.

The Rathskeller was a popular bar for students, but its customers steadily decreased as New York State increased the drinking age from 18 to 19 in 1982 and then to 21 in 1985. It closed the following year.

Wilson Commons is much more than a place to eat, however. It鈥檚 a place to be seen鈥攁nd heard.

鈥淲hether it鈥檚 a social protest, students dressed in costumes or one of our many performing groups rehearsing, all of these sounds are what bring Wilson Commons to life,鈥 says Laura Ballou 鈥97, Wilson Commons director. 鈥淵ou never know what to expect when you walk in, and that鈥檚 what I love about it.鈥

鈥楳eet me at the clock鈥

large white clock stands among students walking in Wilson Commons
Some alumni are still surprised to find the clock is no longer in Hirst Lounge.

One early landmark was a large white clock in Hirst Lounge that existed from the opening of the building until about a decade ago.

鈥淭here was a phrase people used to say: 鈥楳eet me at the clock!鈥欌欌 Ballou says. 鈥淚t was a phrase I used as a student and also was used to promote Wilson Commons in the late 1990s. It was an iconic part of Hirst Lounge, along with the lollypop lights.鈥

Until one day . . .

鈥淲e were working and just heard a loud bang,鈥 Ballou says. 鈥淭he clock had literally fallen off its base and was on the ground. It was going to be too hard to repair, and in many ways, because of its location, was in the way when there were large events there.鈥

A few years later, clocks representing major cities around the world were installed on the wall of Hirst Lounge as part of a senior gift, where the white clock once stood. The clocks today mark the time in New Delhi, Tokyo, Sydney, London, Paris, and Cairo.

The building is also home to the Hartnett Art Gallery, one of the few art galleries in the nation run by students and housed in a student union.

In 1979, the Rochester聽Democrat and Chronicle聽ran a story about what was 鈥渉ot鈥 during the 1970s and would remain relevant in the decades ahead.

Retractable ballpoint pens were mentioned. So was Rochester鈥檚 student union.

Wilson Commons and the legacy of a Rochester family

side by side photos of Peggy and Joseph Wilson over the years
The Wilsons, in 1933 and later in life. 鈥淚f education won鈥檛 bring us the know-how to devise a better tomorrow, where do we get it?鈥 鈥揓oseph Wilson

Wilson Commons was named in honor of longtime University and Rochester community philanthropists Joseph Wilson 鈥31, his wife, Marie (Peggy) Curran Wilson, and their family. Wilson died in New York City on November 22, 1971, five years before the campus center bearing his name opened. Peggy, who was also named to the University鈥檚 Board of Trustees, represented the family and spoke at the dedication of Wilson Commons. Hundreds of students surrounded the building on a sunny, crisp Sunday afternoon, waiting to enter after the ribbon cutting and speeches.

Spring exterior view of I.M. Pei building Wilson Commons at the 人妻少妇专区.
Eastern corner of Wilson Commons exterior in spring 2014. (人妻少妇专区 photo / Brandon Vick)

Wilson Commons is part of a noteworthy legacy at the University:

  • In 1967, the Wilsons committed $20 million for a聽fund to support professorships聽throughout the University. Their gift was reported to be the largest private gift to any US university that year.
  • Wilson Day, established in 1972 as a daylong series of seminars but changed in 1988 to a day of service in the community for first-year students, is also named in their honor.
  • River Boulevard, the main road through the River 人妻少妇专区, was renamed聽Joseph C. Wilson Boulevard聽by the City of Rochester.
  • At the Memorial Art Gallery, the聽Wilson Collection聽and an endowed fund set up by the Wilsons are responsible for some of the museum鈥檚 most notable works.
  • A member of the University鈥檚聽Board of Trustees, Joe Wilson chaired the board from 1959 to 1967. Peggy Wilson served on the board from 1975 to 1982.
  • When Wilson died in 1971, he and his family had given more than $40 million to the University. The family continues the tradition of philanthropy in the Rochester area through the聽Marie and Joseph C. Wilson Foundation.
  • The Wilson鈥檚 generosity of spirit continues on through聽, which celebrates those individuals who have established a gift plan or included the University in their estate.

 


Editor鈥檚 note: A version of this story was originally published in April 2016.聽