A student walks out of 
              Whitman on Mazo Green, with Community Hall in the background. 
              
            Handmade copper 
              gutter. 
              
            The sundial on the wall 
              of Fisher Hall.  
              
             A view through Wright 
              Cloister of the Class of 1963 Courtyard toward 1981 Hall, left, 
              and South Baker Hall.
              
            
 Nearing the college gateway 
              on Pyne Drive with a view of North Hall, the Murley-Pivirotto Family 
              Tower, and Hargadon Hall. 
              Materials were chosen 
              to last 200 years, and 77 masons cut and selected each piece of 
              stone to special parameters in building the walls. “When you 
              come to the things that envelop the wall of a building, the texture 
              and the tactility of the materials are extremely important,” 
              Porphyrios says. “I wanted it to be a group of buildings that 
              will weather naturally, age gracefully, have the wrinkles of time.” 
              
               
              
            Students relax in a 1981 
              Hall common room, top, and study in the North Hall library, with 
              its custom-designed light fixtures and paneled walls.  
              
            The 220-student-capacity 
              main dining hall, with 35-foot ceilings, circular windows, vaulted 
              ceiling, and bluestone floors. 
              
            Professor Paul Sigmund 
              with Efe Balikcioglu ’10 after a seminar in an adjacent, octagonal 
              room. 
              
            The ceiling and chandelier 
              in the small octagonal meeting space. 
              
            The building’s 
              name engraved — an example of the modest ornamentation throughout 
              the college. 
              
             The servery, which has 
              become a draw to students from across campus. 
              Some observers have 
              remarked on the college’s lack of decoration; Porphyrios says 
              he intentionally allowed empty space for residents to add ornamentation 
              over time, allowing the college to grow naturally. 
               
            Robert “Bud” 
              Grote ’08 enjoys what many believe to be the best digs on 
              campus, shared with one roommate. 
              
             Students rehearse in 
              Whitman’s 65-seat theater.  
              
            Master of the College 
              Harvey Rosen sits in Wright Cloister, named for former Princeton 
              vice president and secretary Thomas H. Wright ’62, with Lauritzen 
              Hall out to the left. 
              
             Graduate student Luke 
              Uribarri shows off his single room.
              
            
  In front of Community 
              Hall, from left, are Patricia Chen ’11, Stephen Sims ’09, 
              Lauren Nigro ’09, and Omoshalewa Bamkole ’11.
              
            
 Students walk through 
              the arch at Hargadon Hall.
              
            
 Chester Courtyard, which 
              was inspired by Porphyrios’ experience in Princeton’s 
              Graduate College; Fisher Hall, right, and North Hall are in the 
              background. 
              Porphyrios points out 
              that though the buildings evoke the great universities that emerged 
              in the Middle Ages in Europe, the grounds were designed in the character 
              of an American college campus. Those older European universities, 
              such as Oxford and Cambridge, have straight paths and manicured 
              greens upon which only senior scholars may tread. By contrast, Whitman’s 
              campus has trees, zig-zagging paths, and different levels that invite 
              people to gather. “Here, nature and manmade buildings mix 
              together,” Porphyrios says.   |