The CUNY Graduate Center's main campus is located in the
B. Altman and Company Building at
34th Street and
Fifth Avenue in the
Midtown Manhattan neighborhood of New York City. CUNY shares the B. Altman Building with the
Oxford University Press. Before 2000, the Graduate Center was housed in
Aeolian Hall on West 42nd Street across from the
New York Public Library Main Branch. The CUNY ASRC, which opened in September 2014, is an outgrowth of CUNY's "Decade of Science" initiative, a multibillion-dollar project to elevating science research and education. The CUNY ASRC formally joined the CUNY Graduate Center in spring 2017. In that time, the center also hosted over 400 conferences, seminars, and workshops and awarded over $600,000 in seed grants to CUNY faculty. These facilities are open to researchers from CUNY, other academic institutions, nonprofit organizations, and for-profit companies from around the world. The facilities include: • Advanced Laboratory for Chemical and Isotopic Signatures (ALCIS) Facility • Biomolecular Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Facility • Comparative Medicine Unit (CMU) • Epigenetics Facilities • Imaging Facility • Live Imaging & Bioenergetics Facility • MALDI Imaging Joint Facility • Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) Facility • Macromolecular Crystallization Facility • Mass Spectrometry Core Facility • Nanofabrication Facility • Next Generation Environmental Sensor (NGENS) Lab • Photonics Core Facility • Radio Frequency and mm-Wave Facility • Surface Science Facility
Education and outreach The CUNY ASRC has various scientific education programs. Students from CUNY's community and senior colleges participate in research during the academic year and over the summer through programs such as the CUNY Summer Undergraduate Research Program. Graduate students from master's and doctoral programs at the Graduate Center and from the
Grove School of Engineering are members of CUNY ASRC research teams.
IlluminationSpace The CUNY ASRC's IlluminationSpace is an interactive education center, which accommodates high school field trips and provides free community hours. It has numerous virtual programs and resources. The CUNY ASRC received a Public Interest Technology University Network 2021 Challenge Grant to establish the IlluminationSpace,
STEM pathways, and science communications and outreach at CUNY. The funding is being used to increase participation of underrepresented demographic groups in STEM fields.
Community Sensor Lab The CUNY ASRC Community Sensor Lab teaches high school students and community members how to build inexpensive, homemade
sensors that can monitor aspects of the environment from the level of carbon dioxide and pollutants in the air to acidity in the soil and water.
Faculty opportunities The CUNY ASRC offers a seed grant program to fund collaborative research that supports tenured and tenure-track faculty at CUNY colleges. The program started in 2015 and currently awards six one-year, $20,000 grants annually. In addition, the center's
National Science Foundation CAREER Bootcamp Program, which guides tenure-track faculty through the proposal writing process, have helped CUNY researchers secure substantial NSF CAREER grants.
Grants and research Between 2014 and 2019, CUNY ASRC researchers secured 126 grants totaling $61 million. Faculty, postdoctoral fellows, and graduate students at the CUNY ASRC also hold several patents. Professor Kevin Gardner, director of the CUNY ASRC Structural Biology Initiative, was instrumental in the identification of hypoxia-inducible factor 2-alpha (
HIF-2α) as a druggable target and the drug development efforts that led to the FDA-approved first-in-kind kidney cancer drug from Merck, belzutifan. The CUNY ASRC is home to one of 15 Centers for Advanced Technology (CATs) designated by Empire State Development NYSTAR. Funded by a nearly $8.8 million grant, the CUNY ASRC Sensor CAT spurs academic-industry partnerships to develop sensor-based technology. Developing biomedical and environmental sensors is a particular focus, as is finding new approaches to sensing through photonics, materials, and nanoscience research. The team's work could lead to greater sensing capabilities for the
Internet of Things, improvements in biomedical applications, and extreme control of sound waves for medical imaging and wireless technology. Alù's $3 million fellowship, awarded in 2019, allowed him to develop new materials that enable extreme wave manipulation in the context of
thermal radiation and heat management. Ulijn's $3 million fellowship, awarded in 2021, allowed him to research how complex mixtures of molecules acquire functionality and to repurpose this understanding to create new
nanotechnology that is inspired by living systems.
Mina Rees Library The Mina Rees Library, named after former president
Mina Rees, supports the research, teaching, and learning activities of the CUNY Graduate Center by connecting its community with print materials, electronic resources, research assistance and instruction, and expertise about the complexities of scholarly communication. Situated on three floors of the CUNY Graduate Center, the library is a hub for discovery, delivery, digitization, and a place for solitary study. The library offers many services, including research consultations, a 24/7 online chat service with reference librarians, and workshops and webinars on using research tools. The library also serves as a gateway to the collections of other CUNY libraries, the
New York Public Library (NYPL), and libraries worldwide. It participates in a CUNY-wide book delivery system and offers an interlibrary loan service to bring materials from outside CUNY to Graduate Center scholars. The
main branch of NYPL is just a few blocks north on Fifth Avenue, and NYPL's
Science, Industry and Business Library is just around the corner inside the B. Altman Building. CUNY Graduate Center students and faculty are NYPL's primary academic constituents, with borrowing privileges from NYPL research collections. NYPL's participation in the Manhattan Research Library Initiative (MaRLI) extends borrowing privileges for CUNY Graduate Center students to NYU and Columbia libraries as well. The Mina Rees Library is a key participant in the CUNY Graduate Center's digital initiatives. It supports the digital scholarship of students and faculty and promotes the understanding, creation, and use of open-access literature. Among its special collections is the
Activist Women's Voices collection, an oral history project focused on unheralded New York City community-based women activists.
Cultural venues The CUNY Graduate Center houses three performance spaces and two art galleries. The Harold M. Proshansky Auditorium, named for the institution's second president, is located on the concourse level and contains 389 seats. The Baisley Powell Elebash Recital Hall, located on the first floor, seats 180. The Martin E. Segal Theatre, also located on the first floor, seats 70.
James Gallery The ground floor of the CUNY Graduate Center houses the Amie and
Tony James Gallery, also known as the James Gallery, which the Center for the Humanities oversees. The James Gallery intends to bring scholars and artists into dialog with one another and serve as a site for interdisciplinary research. The James Gallery hosts numerous exhibitions annually, and has hosted solo exhibitions by notable American and international artists such as
Alison Knowles and
Dor Guez.
CUNY TV and NYC Media CUNY TV The University's citywide cable channel, CUNY TV, broadcasts on cable and WNYE's digital terrestrial television subchannel 25.3. Its production studios and offices are located on the first floor, while the broadcast satellite dishes reside on the building's ninth floor (rooftop).
NYC Media Sharing CUNY TV's main facilities is NYC Media, which is the official broadcast network and media production group of the NYC Mayor's Office of Media and Entertainment. The group includes WNYE-FM (91.5) radio station and WNYE-TV television channel (Channel 25), which also puts out "NYCLife" programming on 25.1 and "NYCGov" on 25.2, all broadcast 24/7 from within the building. == Academics ==