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Serendipity. It’s not a term you would typically associate with the rigors of engineering. Nevertheless, the word bubbled up many times during the presentation for the collaborative design course ES-96, a longstanding rite of passage for junior engineering sciences students pursuing the S.B. degree.
Fifteen undergraduates reported on “Bridging the Gap: Connecting Harvard’s Allston and Cambridge Communities.” Their semester-long mission: devising a plan to keep the campus together even as it expands across the Charles River, while finding a way to preserve what they viewed as the essential characteristic of everyday student life — serendipity. In other words, those accidental interactions (the shout-outs, the bear hugs, or the shared shrug about the weird weather) that occur during the daily circuit from dorm room to classroom to dining hall.
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