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Renovating a President's Residence
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| Hart House: home
to future leaders |
| Photo:
JIm Wallace |
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Duke trustees have decided to renovate the
house of former university president Deryl Hart '64 at the
corner of Cameron Boulevard and Duke University Road as a residence
for Duke presidents. This is the first time since the Sixties that
the university president's residence will be located on campus.
"Its campus location and setting are ideal, and when renovated
it will be a great facility," says trustee chair Peter Nicholas
'64. "We believe it will serve future Duke presidents and
Duke well."
Richard H. Brodhead, who will become Duke's ninth president on
July 1, and his wife, Cindy, will move into the house after renovations
have been completed, probably around year's end, says Duke's executive
vice president, Tallman Trask III.
President Nannerl O. Keohane and her husband, Robert, have lived
in the Knight House, a university-owned property in Duke Forest
about one mile from campus. Knight House, named for former President
Douglas Knight, has served as the home for three Duke presidents:
Knight, who was president when it was built in the 1960s; Terry
Sanford; and Keohane. It also served as a university guesthouse
and conference facility during the presidency of Keohane's predecessor,
H. Keith H. Brodie, when he decided to live in his own home when
he was elected in 1985. Trask says the Knight House will likely
be used as it was during the Brodie presidency.
The Hart House is a three-story building built of brick and timber.
Members of the Hart family lived there from 1933, when the house
was built, until the death of Mary Hart, President Hart's widow,
in July 2000. Hart was Duke's president from 1960 to 1963. Duke's
board of trustees had promised him a house on campus when he was
recruited from Johns Hopkins University to be head of surgery,
giving him a fifty-year lease for $1. After his death in 1980,
the trustees said that Mary Hart could stay in the house as long
as she wished.
The death of Mrs. Hart led the trustees to consider the future
of the house, says Nicholas. "Everyone recognized that a decision
to keep it, rather than replace it, would require the structure
to be substantially modernized, and there was a strong sentiment
favoring a president's home on campus and keeping the house as
a residence rather than converting it to other administrative uses.
We think it is important for the president's home to be easily
accessible to the campus community."
The renovated president's house, which borders Duke's football
field at the intersection of two main campus roads, will provide
both official function space and private living quarters. Trask
says the renovation will be costly because the house lacks air-conditioning
and still has its original wiring, plumbing, and mechanical systems.
The public spaces must be made accessible for visitors with disabilities,
and planners also must consider issues ranging from vehicle access
to landscaping and security.
Trask will oversee the project with Kemel Dawkins, vice president
for campus services, and John Pearce, university architect, with
help from outside architects, designers, and engineers. The project
will be funded by donations from several university trustees.
Before the construction of the Knight House, Duke presidents lived
in several locations. The university's first president, William
Preston Few, lived in the house on Campus Drive now occupied by
the Office of Undergraduate Admissions. His successor, Robert Lee
Flowers, remained in his personal home at the end of Chapel Drive,
a building that now houses the Office of Alumni Affairs. Next was
Arthur Edens, who took residence in the same "president's
house" used by Few. Edens was followed by Hart.
Brodhead says that he looks forward to making the house a true
home for himself and his family, as well as a gathering place for
university events. "I appreciate the trustees' decision to
renovate the Hart House, which will provide a wonderful venue for
campus events and home for Cindy and me and for future Duke presidents," Brodhead
says. "It's a particularly lovely building, and it means a
lot to me that students and faculty will be able to walk to our
home from campus."
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