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Steve Bradt
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Harvard Planting 71 Trees Along City Streets Adjacent to Campus

New plantings to grace Cambridge, Felton, Kirkland, and Prescott Sts., Sumner Rd., Broadway

Cambridge, Mass. - September 16, 2004 - Harvard University has begun planting 71 new trees along six city streets near the campus' eastern edge. The trees, placed in consultation with university neighbors, the Cambridge city arborist, and the Cambridge Committee on Public Planting, are being planted as part of public way improvements related to construction of Harvard's new Center for Government and International Studies (CGIS), twin structures now under construction along both sides of Cambridge Street.

The trees, many of them already in place, include ornamental katsura trees, sugar maples, Chinese elms, red maples, thornless common honeylocusts, littleleaf lindens, Japanese pagoda trees, ginkos, higan cherries, red oaks, and hedge maples. Harvard has committed to caring for the trees, most of which should reach maturity in 15 to 20 years, for the next five years.

"These trees and the extensive landscaping that will be done as part of this project will significantly improve the environment within the area," said David Zewinski, associate dean of physical resources and planning in Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences. "The new trees, together with the CGIS exterior which is nearing completion, offer a preview of just how attractive this project will be when finished."

The young trees are to line Cambridge, Felton, Kirkland, and Prescott streets, Sumner Road, and Broadway. With community input, the trees have been matched to their settings and, as an ensemble, will be resistant to disease. For instance, grander maples and elms have been planted along Kirkland Street, while smaller trees will grace narrower Sumner Road. In some instances where utility conflicts preclude sidewalk planting, or the sidewalk is too narrow, the new trees have been located on private property.

To ensure healthy root development -- often a problem for urban trees -- existing, highly compacted soil at the planting sites has been replaced by structured soils. The current effort represents one of the most extensive applications to date of this cutting-edge arboricultural technique in the City of Cambridge.

The public way improvements being undertaken by Harvard will also include sidewalk improvements along approximately 3,500 linear feet of the same six streets. The red brick sidewalks, underpinned by layers of concrete and an asphalt bed, have been engineered to prevent settling and the development of uneven surfaces, both of which commonly afflict brick walkways. Where trees are planted, the new sidewalks will include small pipes leading underground to aerate the soil and provide water to the trees' roots.

Designed by Harry Cobb of Pei Cobb Freed & Partners to promote both formal and informal interactions among faculty and students, CGIS is slated for completion in late spring 2005. Encompassing two new buildings on either side of Cambridge Street and several existing wood frame houses in a complex accommodating a range of academic and administrative uses, CGIS will create a new home for Harvard's Department of Government and various international research centers in a single location convenient to related social sciences programs.

The two new Pei Cobb Freed-designed structures along Cambridge Street feature sweeping rounded expanses of glass, dramatic circular stairways visible from the street, and a distinctive terra cotta facade. The buildings will house faculty offices, graduate student work space, classrooms, library and computer facilities, and a cafe.

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