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Health & Fitness

Murals at Babson and Wellesley Highlight Sustainability

New Wellesley and Babson College murals depict sustainability initiatives; the murals are currently on display together on the fourth floor of Wellesley's student center.

As a celebration of facilities and landscape sustainability efforts at Babson and Wellesley Colleges, and the relatively new Babson, Olin, Wellesley (BOW) Certificate in Sustainability, a group of very talented students, faculty and staff members from each school designed and constructed ceramic murals highlighting initiatives at Wellesley and Babson.

The murals have been on display together at Babson College since April 27. They moved to Wellesley College and were installed near the entrance to the Bae Pao Lu Chow Dining Room on the fourth floor of the Lulu Chow Wang Campus Center ("The Lulu") yesterday. They will be together at the Lulu until later this summer then the Babson mural will go back to Babson and the Wellesley mural will go to its long-term home in the Wellesley Science Center.

“When I heard about this project at a January BOW event, I jumped at the opportunity to do something artistically creative,” said Corri Taylor, director of Wellesley's Quantitative Reasoning Program. “I'm a strong supporter of Sustainability in practice and as academic topic, and I was excited to do something to draw attention to Sustainability efforts on our campus.” Last fall, Taylor organized Wellesley’s "Celebrating Quantitative Reasoning (QR) Connections" series around the theme of QR & Sustainability.

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Caitlin Greenhill Caldrea ‘14 designed the Wellesley mural. Aidan Chambers '13, Stephanie Osser, instructor and manager of the Babson College Ceramics studio, and Taylor led Wellesley's creative team. The murals were funded through The BOW Three College Collaboration, and specifically by a Mellon Presidential Project grant awarded to Osser.

The design and creation of the murals was a collaborative effort by dozens of students, faculty, and staff at the two institutions. Participants who worked on Wellesley's mural included students Erika Liu '15, Vanessa Barrera '12, Olivia Froehlich '14, Sophie Johnson '12, Graeme Durovich '15, Patty Suquilanda '13, Valerie Soon '13, Susan Laves '12, Emma Maynard '13 and Lilly Gorman '15, Wellesley's Karen Pabon (Director, Slater International), Professor Dan Brabander, and Professor Kristina Jones, and Jamaal Eversley, a Babson Class of 2009 alumnus, also contributed their time and talents in various phases from design to glazing.

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“We started the mural, stomping barefoot on the clay,” Taylor said. “Then we transferred the image, sculpted and carved it, cut the 4' x 4' work into small enough tiles for the kiln, glazed the tiles, and assembled the ceramic collage together again.” 

The two bas-relief ceramic collages illustrate significant sustainability efforts at the two colleges. The Wellesley College mural includes images of:

  • The renovated Whitin Observatory, which was awarded silver LEED certification;
  • The restoration of the Alumnae Valley, including Cattail Pond behind the Lulu;
  • The LED lights in the College’s iconic lanterns;
  • The beehives behind the Science Center and honey bees;
  • The photovoltaic solar array;
  • The zero-emission, all electric van retrofitted with a solar panel;
  • A student riding one of the Revolution pink bikes (communal bike program);
  • And Students' gardening/farming efforts

 

Images on the Babson mural include energy efficient campus buildings, a “Big Belly Solar Energy Compactor,” Babson’s bike share program, a gardener, and "a person with an idea, represented by compact fluorescent light bulbs," said Susanna Kroll, Babson College Class of 2014 and lead designer of the Babson mural, in a quote shared by Corri Taylor. "After all, without ideas, sustainability efforts cannot continually improve.” 

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