The Aspen Meadows Reception Center and Pavilion has long been an important meeting place for the exchange of ideas. Now, a major renovation—fully funded in 2017—is on schedule to be completed in June. The center, built in 1958, will reopen as the Walter Isaacson Center, in recognition of Walter Isaacson’s service as Institute president and CEO. The renovations will reflect designer Herbert Bayer’s vision and classic Bauhaus style. The center’s new features will add an event and dining space to the main floor—the Madeleine K. Albright Pavilion—and will also include the Mercedes Bass Castle Creek Deck, the Bonnie and Kenneth Davis Commons, the Diane L. Morris Lobby, the Bren and Mel Simon Terrace, Limeslicers Bar, Moderators Bridge, and the Laurie M. Tisch Terrace and Gardens. The project was spearheaded by Shaw Construction, Jeffrey Berkus Architects, and Jim Curtis, the project manager for the renovations. The grand opening and dedication is scheduled for this summer.
IDEAS Article, IDEAS: the Magazine of the Aspen Institute Summer 2018, and Longform
Welcome to the Isaacson Center
June 19, 2018
Jump to
Related
Tools: Employee Ownership
View tools and resources related to employee ownership.
Centering Workers in Workforce Development
The Chicagoland Workforce Funder Alliance collaborates with employers and stakeholders to boost employment, earnings, and equity for local workers.
Lessons and Leadership To Foster Economic Justice for Illinois Workers
LEP trains workers to promote equity, enforce rights, build unions, develop leaders, ensure workplace safety, and advance economic justice.
Worker Owned and Worker Driven
While the rideshare apps have increased convenience, they’ve eroded job quality. See how the Drivers’ Cooperative is helping to end exploitative conditions.
Creating Employee-Owned Businesses That Provide Good Jobs and Succeed
Through employee ownership, The Industrial Commons is building a new Southern working class that erases the inequities of generational poverty.
Strengthening the Hidden Resilience Workforce
We see the effects of climate change, but we rarely see the people who help to rebuild — and they often lack safe conditions, decent pay, or benefits.
Advancing a Pro-Worker, Pro-Climate Agenda in Texas
The Texas Climate Jobs Project advances a pro-worker, pro-climate agenda — helping to solve the climate crisis while creating millions of good jobs.
Organizing and Coalition Building for Structural Change
LAANE, led by Job Quality Fellow Roxana Tynan, is fighting to build an economy rooted in good jobs, thriving communities, and a healthy environment.
Organizing Unemployed and Underemployed Workers
UWU, led by Job Quality Fellow Neidi Dominguez, engages unemployed/underemployed workers, a population that has not been mobilized at scale since the 1930s.
How Local Journalism Can Bring Communities Together
MIT Center for Constructive Communication Director Deb Roy explains how the caricatures Republicans and Democrats paint of each other diverge from reality, and the ways local newsrooms can leverage their “trust capital” and emerging technology to promote listening and understanding amid disagreement.