Word: buildings
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Three types of obstacles--technical, political and financial--hamper work for such housing in Cambridge. While probably not insurmountable, they do nonetheless make it likely that progress from intentions to build such housing to actual construction of it will not be easy...
This shortage of data is, however, less important than another technical difficulty: finding suitable tracts of land on which to build housing. Cambridge is a densely developed city; unoccupied land is difficult to find. While Harvard owns several tracts of land other than those now owned by the universities or local government agencies...
December 5: While special committees of the Radcliffe Union of Students were studying ways to merge their college into Harvard, the Radcliffe administration went ahead with building plans in the Quad. Mrs. Bunting said that for $2 million the college could build an underground coffee shop linking Bertram and Eliot Halls, as well as renovate the interiors of the two dorms...
...committee of Design School students and faculty asked the University to build 500 units of housing--half for Harvard personnel and half for low-income Cambridge families--on a site near the Divinity School. Current University plans called for 160 units of faculty housing on the site...
...university should proceed with its plans to build approximately 120 units of faculty housing on the Shady Hill site, which it now owns...