Sung talks about the Carpenter Center and the Art Museum Cafe and shows his favorite study spot
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
So right now we're walking to the Carpenter center. The Carpenter Center isn't a very used building. It is architecturally significant I've been learning all about during. During on My Architecture seminar, my freshman seminar. It's like a small group of, like up to twelve people who take it, and you have studied different topics. It was designed by this really famous French architect, and this was his first building ever to be designed in the North, in North America. I'm I'm going to show you guys my favorite study spot. It's a bit of a walk, but no is the architectural design. It may seem insignificant, but all of this, like window like the creases in the window, like how the windows aren't fully facing. It's because how the sun sets and the sun rises. This idea of being able to go through the building was something that on the architect really emphasized. It's a little platform, but it has a lavender garden. This is all lavender plants and comes spring and summer. Do you have little desks and chairs for you to study. Next door is a little like book story associate with the Carpenter Center. Yeah, the carbon con center is primarily used for visual and environmental studies like concentrators, which is basically another word for like photography and stuff like film and that kind of areas. There's a wood shop down there you can see through the windows, and this is a store. Yes, this actually leads straight to the art museum, So if you keep walking down right across the corner is the art Museum, the Harvard Art Museum. You can still see, like little glimpses of the exhibitions. If we look carefully enough, the Harvard Art Museum is one of them or underappreciated places. They have like freshly pressed juices and like different peace trees. Eso Some Harvard students like to work in the Cuffy's themselves.