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Modern Eats

Aug 1, 2010 12:00 PM, By Stuart Rothenberger

The dining hall has been transformed to respond to changing student needs.

-New designs increase student traffic to dining halls. At one university in Michigan, a new marketplace concept has resulted in student meals served per day jumping from 2,000 to 5,000 immediately after the hall opened—with the same number of students. New dining halls can become destination points for students.

-Disappearing faculty dining areas. The "faculty-only" dining hall, separate from students, is becoming a thing of the past. With improved cuisine and multiple dining nooks where each professor can find a comfortable spot, most faculty are embracing the Marché concept heartily. The more democratic dining hall also fosters more faculty-student interaction.

-Environmentally conscious dining. Although sustainable design now is woven into the fabric of most architectural thinking, dining halls have their own peculiarities.

Waste management is one, in which disposed-of food is not carted off to landfills; rather it is placed in compost heaps on campus. Many dining environments now are tray-less so that students don’t overload their trays and then throw half the food away; instead, some college dining halls are going retro, using individual china plates to limit portions.

Chefs also are buying locally grown produce. This ensures fresh food, but also reduces the carbon footprint produced by shipping food from afar.

-Location at traffic nexus. New buildings that include dining facilities and other social gathering venues are situated strategically near the highest pedestrian traffic areas and, when possible, near public transportation.

-Technology and media. New dining halls incorporate TVs, monitors, sound systems, wireless outlets for smart phones, kiosks with computers to check e-mail and other technology to embrace the anywhere-anytime communications society in which we live today.

Sidebar: Modern Marketplace

The newly renovated $6.5 million Rock Cafe at Ferris State University, Big Rapids, Mich., epitomizes the revolution in fresh-food cuisine and marketplace dining environments now embraced by a growing number of college and university campuses across the United States.

The 33,000-square-foot cafeteria-style dining hall (with multiple interior bearing walls, a back-of-the-house kitchen and uniform seating) was transformed into a vibrant, spacious and modern emporium, with eight open-display food platforms and a rich mix of seating options.

Rock Cafe creates a home-like environment for students with warm and inviting colors; defined, distinct seating areas; and the selective use of quarry tile, carpeting, diverse ceiling finishes, exposed structures, suspended acoustical panels and decorative soffits. Among the new seating environments created for students in the food emporium:

-A cafe-style seating area with a built-in, bar-height counter that surrounds a Brazilian churrascaria grill and television viewing area.  

-A built-in, double-sided fireplace with couches and coffee tables.

-A private dining room with seating for 32, which includes televisions and presentation equipment. •Built-in booth seating for groups of four to 12.

-Traditional student dining areas with various table configurations.

-A large built-in bar that faces the servery and provides a location for student dining as well as a place to “see and be seen.”

Before ensconcing themselves to eat, students order their meals from an array of new food stations at the Rock Cafe servery. Meals are prepared individually in front of the students by chefs who are hired for their ability to exhibit their culinary skills in an entertaining fashion. For example, chefs stir-fry personalized orders of meat, sauce, spices and vegetables at the Brazilian churrascaria grill, or bake a specially ordered Hawaiian pizza in a woodfire oven. Simpler fare, such as burgers and sandwiches, also are prepared to order—and always fresh.

The full range of new open-display food platforms: Brazilian churrascaria grill, grill station, comfort-foods station, salad bar (including specialty salad station), dessert bar, pizza oven, pasta station, bakery and deli station—and the convenience store with made-to-order oven pizza, which can be delivered to residence halls.

Although much of the planning and design for the new dining hall was focused on the interior spaces, the exterior of the building was improved as well. The light-colored brick walls of the original building were retained, but standing-seam metal roofing was added to give the facility a modern look.

A new entrance vestibule juts out from the main structure. Adjacent to the vestibule, the architect placed rustic fieldstone walls that define an outdoor patio. The patio is a casual seating area during the spring and summer, and readily converts to a stage for musical performances.

Rothenberger, AIA, LEED AP, is senior vice president with STV Inc., Douglassville, Pa. The firm designed the Rock Cafe at Ferris State University (see sidebar). stuart.rothenberger@stvinc.com

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