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A new look for the MITAA

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“You can’t overstate the contributions to design of true legends like Muriel Cooper [MIT Press’s longtime design director and a cofounding faculty member of the Media Lab] and Jacqueline Casey [an Institute graphic designer who achieved renown for her posters],” says Bierut. “In the 1960s and ’70s, they helped define a visual language that not only communicated the MIT experience so well—it also helped the world ‘out there’ understand MIT in a new way.”

Cooper and Casey, devotees of the “Swiss style” of graphic design that had emerged in the first half of the 20th century, were instrumental in ushering in typographic motifs that remain dominant today, including the ubiquitous sans serif font Helvetica. Designed by Max Miedinger and Eduard Hoffmann at the Haas Type Foundry, it was originally called Neue Haas Grotesk. The Linotype Corporation licensed it and (with some nuanced modifications) renamed it in 1960.

“I would argue that any US academic institutions—and perhaps outside academia, too—that are using this style today owe a big thanks to MIT, who in my opinion have owned Helvetica from the beginning,” says Bierut.

Alongside the design process, Pentagram writing partner Andrea Jarrell developed a “manifesto” of sorts to provide language to accompany the brand.

“The MIT alum is joyfully filled with paradoxes,” says Jarrell. “In one breath, they’re talking excitedly about their restless need for progress, about solving the toughest problems out there to make a brighter future. And yet in the next, they are passionately talking about the history and traditions that form their MIT-ness. To be authentic in both the words and the design, we needed to factor in the joy and quirky fun of the famous MIT hacks and Tim the Beaver alongside the gravity and respect for the society-changing advances.”

Bierut and his design team, including Sachi Chandiramani, understood that this dichotomy was a core part of the assignment. Their eyes turned back to campus—specifically, toward the Infinite Corridor that connects MIT’s buildings between Kendall Square and Massachusetts Avenue. There, they found the quiet but important work of sign maker Glenn Silva, who has been handcrafting the department and faculty titles on the hallway doors for decades. Early on in his time at MIT, Silva shared the responsibility with the late Gifford Hudson.

The serif lettering style Silva employed has visual ties with other parts of the Institute’s history, including the etched writing adorning the exteriors of the “Main Group” of original Beaux Arts buildings that date back to the Institute’s 1916 move from Boston to Cambridge. Bierut also learned that typeface designer Tim Ripper had been designing a digital type based on the lettering on the doors at MIT; in fact, he was calling it Corridor.

143,000 alumni, one design

As Jarrell penned a manifesto on the MIT alumni experience, highlighting its many themes, the designers searched for a single path forward in terms of establishing a visual identity. While the manifesto would be used behind the scenes as a guideline for expressing the spirit of the alumni community, the graphic branding elements would be viewed by all. The Association knew that getting it right was critical.

One major recommendation was that the logo the group designed should focus on the idea of “MIT Alumni” rather than on the MIT Alumni Association as an organization. This would ensure that the alumni community felt the mark represented them—the nearly 143,000 living Institute graduates. In this concept, “MIT Alumni” is the visual brand, and the MIT Alumni Association helps facilitate the alumni experience, as it has done since it formed in 1875 with the mission to “further the well-being of the Institute and its graduates by increasing the interest of members in the school and in each other.” 

To ensure that the design with the greatest alumni resonance was chosen, Pentagram and the staff turned to the MIT Alumni Association board of directors as representatives of the broader alumni community. In March 2020, Bierut attended the board’s quarterly meeting on campus to offer up three of the design directions for a new logo that his team had come up with. Two leaned heavily toward the Helvetica-inspired camp, while a third was rooted in the Corridor approach.

Upon hearing feedback from the volunteer leaders that each font might resonate strongly with the community for different reasons, Pentagram developed a concept that would allow for both. The new brand would have two official typefaces, Neue Haas Grotesk (in its original form) and Corridor GG, which the Association has officially and exclusively licensed as a digital type, with the “GG” an homage to letterers Silva and Hudson. The former would be used as a font for the new mark, “MIT Alumni,” while the latter could be deployed as a display font to deliver core messages within the design.

“What Pentagram showed us was a design path that enabled us to integrate both fonts, both aspects of our community,” says Espich. “Our alumni and alumnae have a deep history of societal contributions yet are also futurists. They are rooted in technical excellence and pragmatism, while also always reaching for new knowledge and new understanding. There is no one way to define them. With this new mark, we seem to have found a solution.”

When Bierut returned to present the new concept to the MIT Alumni Association board of directors during their December 2020 meeting, it received resounding support. Subsequent presentations to smaller groups of MIT volunteers and Institute stakeholders further confirmed the warm reception. The new visual identity—consisting of the two typefaces, as well as an updated color palette—officially debuted during the 2021 MIT Alumni Leadership Conference with a new alumni video.

“I like to think that our new mark is more than an exciting logo with beautiful fonts and color choices, but rather it is a story,” says Association president Annalisa Weigel ’94, ’95, SM ’00, PhD ’02. “It tells the world who we are as MIT alumni. In order for it to be successful, the alumni need to resonate with that story. Based on the smiles and nods of recognition I have seen on the faces of alumni, of all ages and stages, I think the new brand is telling our story very well.”


Notice of Proposed Changes to a Governing Document of the MIT Alumni Association  

Board of Directors of the MITAA unanimously endorses amendments

Pursuant to Article XI (“Amendments”) of the current Articles of Organization and Constitution of the Association of Alumni and Alumnae of MIT (the “Constitution”), notice is hereby given of proposed amendments to the Constitution. These amendments, proposed after an in-depth examination by the Ad-Hoc Committee on Governance, will cause the Constitution to be more accurate and more consistent with the current operational structure of the MITAA. 

The changes and a summary can be viewed at http://alum.mit.edu/constitutionamendment. The Constitution includes a mechanism for alumni to review changes before they are implemented or to petition collectively to require a full alumni membership vote.

The members of the Ad-Hoc Committee on Governance are Stephen DeFalco ’83, SM ’88 (chair), Elaine Harris ’78, Kevin Pryzbocki ’86, SM ’87, Ramon San Pedro ’86, SM ’88, Annalisa Weigel ’94, ’95, SM ’00, PhD ’02 (ex officio), and Whitney T. Espich (ex officio).

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