|
Renowned Architectural Acoustician Leo Beranek Presents His Professional Library to Rensselaer
Renowned architectural acoustician Leo Beranek is presenting
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute with his historic collection
of acoustics books. His gift acknowledges the top status of
Rensselaer’s graduate program in architectural acoustics and
offers students access to the rare books he has accumulated in
a lifetime of work within the field.
Beranek will visit Rensselaer on April 1 to present his gift
and also to tour the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and
Performing Arts Center, and lecture on contributions to
acoustics and the history of music and concert halls.
Beranek, past president of Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN),
was involved in producing the ARPANET communications system —
the forerunner of today’s Internet — and, in addition to
widespread professional recognition, was in 2003 awarded the
President’s National Medal of Science, the highest honor
bestowed on scientists in this country. Specializing in the
acoustics of concert halls and opera houses, Beranek has been
involved in the design of performance venues around the world
including Philharmonic Hall in New York City, the New National
Theater Opera House in Tokyo, the Benjamin Franklin Hall in
Berlin, and the Queen Elizabeth Theatre in Vancouver.
Ning Xiang, director of the graduate program in
architectural acoustics at Rensselaer, said Beranek’s choice of
Rensselaer as custodian of his personal library points to the
importance of Rensselaer in the field of architectural
acoustics.
“The significance of this is that Dr. Beranek recognizes
that the graduate program in architectural acoustics at
Rensselaer is the best program in the nation,” Xiang said. “At
the same time, it points to his expectation that the Rensselaer
Graduate Program will educate the next generation of top
architectural acousticians.”
Beranek will present the collection of books to Rensselaer
on April 1 at 3 p.m. in the Fishbach Room of Folsom Library. He
will also sign copies of his books Concert Halls and Opera
Houses and Riding the Waves. Berenak will also
speak on “Some Important Contributions to Acoustics” on April 1
at 10 a.m. at the Biotech Auditorium, and on “History of Music
in Concert Halls” on April 2 at 11 a.m. in the Biotech
Auditorium.
The book collection — 21 feet long — includes valuable rare
editions from Beranek’s early years as an acoustic engineer and
architectural acoustician more than 60 years ago, Xiang
said.
“He started his career in 1937 at Harvard University. Many
of his books are from the 1940s and 1950s. Those books are not
available anymore, but they have a huge value to our students
and faculty,” Xiang said.
Contact:
Mary Martialay
(518) 276-2146
martim12@rpi.edu
|