The architects were the San Francisco firm Clark and Morgan, which was likely the firm of Hervey Parke Clark at the time. The tower is named for
Thomas M. Storke, a
Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and U.S. senator who resided in Santa Barbara and helped found UCSB. He also contributed funds to the building of the tower and the Storke Communications Plaza, which is situated at the base of the tower. The Plaza houses the university paper (the
Daily Nexus), the radio station (
KCSB-FM), and the yearbook office (
La Cumbre Yearbook); the top of the tower supports cell phone signal transmitters and a KCSB radio antenna. The open-air area of the Plaza contains a large rectangular pond that functioned as a
reflecting pool until 2003, when it was transformed into a cost-saving and partially self-sustaining
aquatic ecosystem including
koi and
water lilies. There have been occasional carillon recitals and courses in how to play the carillon. The tower has also been part of performance art projects. Until 2008, UC Santa Barbara
ROTC cadets used Storke Tower for mountaineering training, rappelling down the tower as a culmination exercise. This practice was discontinued by campus administrators for liability reasons citing student safety and ROTC policies prohibiting the physically disabled from participating in the exercise. ==See also==