Dartmouth Announces $25 Million Gift to the Arts
Construction on the began its final phase this winter. The buildingâwhich as of mid-December is now fully enclosedâis on track to officially reopen in the fall as a hub for welcoming, gathering, and creation of all kinds.
When it opens, the revitalized Hop will serve as the primary gateway to Dartmouthâs Arts District, which includes the Hood Museum of Art, the Black Family Visual Arts Center, Maffei Plaza, and The Warehouse sonic arts lab at 4 Currier Place.
The performance lab: âWhere creation happensâ
A centerpiece of the new Hop will be its state-of-the-art performance labâa one-of-a-kind, fully adaptable, technologically advanced space capable of supporting any artistic vision faculty, student, and visiting creators can imagine.
Housed in the new Daryl and Steven Roth Wing, which has four performance spaces and live arts laboratories, the performance lab is âwhere creation happens,â says , the Howard Gilman â44 Executive Director of the Hop. âThe space is so fully adaptable that it lends itself toward animating the richest innovations possible. Thereâs no space like it in the Upper Valley, and certainly no space like it on our campus.â
Built in the footprint of the former Alumni Hall, the performance lab will have retractable seating, allowing for an array of audience arrangements, and one of the Hopâs four sprung floors, suitable for professional-caliber dance and acrobatics. (The other sprung floors will be in the new dance studio, the recital hall, and the theater rehearsal room.)

The lab will be adaptable âto any kind of configuration, any kind of performance installation, anything technologically equipped, anything digitally equipped that we had ever hoped forâfrom performative installations to dance parties, jazz club environments, fashion shows, or any event format that is not anchored in people sitting in seats looking up at a stage,â Aleskie says.
It will also be the technical nerve center of the entire Hop, Aleskie says, controlling the LED lighting that will charge the atmosphere of the building throughout the day and into the evening.
âDuring the day, the building has a character thatâs buzzy and bright. And as twilight comes up, it starts to take on a different temperature,â Aleskie says. âIt becomes luminescent, and it calls to the community and says, âThis is the place to be.ââ
World-class spaces for music, theater, and more
As envisioned by the internationally renowned design firm SnĂžhetta, the Roth Wing will also boast the world-class Jack 1953 and Mac 2011 Morris Recital Hall, equipped with specialty drapes that allow for controlled acoustical levels and resonances for more intimate performances and rehearsals. Aleskie calls it âthe most perfect recital hall in New England, and maybe just about anywhere.â
Renovated spaces include refurbished and acoustically optimized performance and rehearsal spaces for music and theater, student workshops, accessible backstage areas that Aleskie says will be âan exciting hangout for a lot of students,â and a completely reconfigured Top of the Hop.
The familiar arched vaulted roof and brick exterior of the original Hop is being complemented by the 15,000-square-foot Roth Wing (named in honor of the $25 million lead gift from Daryl and Steve Roth â62, Tuck â63), clad with elegantly curved concrete panels on the south side and, on the north side facing the Green, with the similarly curving copper-toned steel mullions and glass panels of the two-story recital hall.
âThose 6,000-pound pieces of glass were shipped from Germany and meticulously installed one by one with three teams, one calling the commands, one guiding, and the last one holding it with suction cupsâ as each piece was secured, says Aleskie, whose office in Wilson Hall has given her a prime view of the construction process.

âFrom the recital hall, we can look out across the Green and see Baker Tower, which was the inspiration for the shape of the glass panels and mullions that frame the tower. So when you sit in this room, you not only get to hear wonderful music, but you get to be inspired by the things we love most at Dartmouth.â
The recital hall sits atop Dartmouthâs first-ever professional-caliber dance studio, which is also two storiesâhigh enough to âaccommodate any leap that any dancer can make,â says Aleskie, who traces the tradition of dance excellence at Dartmouth to the founding of the modern dance troupe Pilobolus at the Hop in the early 1970s. Clerestory windows allow street-level visitors a glimpse into the studio while preserving rehearsing dancersâ privacy.
Accessible, welcoming, energy-efficient
A landscaped, accessible plaza opens from East Wheelock Street into the Roth Wing forumânow the Hopâs primary entrance, with a broad central staircase leading up to faculty offices, the recital hall, the performance lab, and a new public lounge overlooking the Green, adjacent to the Top of the Hop. These stairs replace the staircase that formerly led from the Moore Theater lobby to the Top of the Hop, allowing the Top of the Hop to be a more discrete, flexible space for studying, gathering, and events, complete with its own cafĂ©/bar.
âOne of the most fundamental changes to the Hop is that the new building is just going to be much more welcoming, intuitive, and accessible,â says , senior vice president of capital planning and campus operations.
In addition, Keniston says the Hopâs design emphasizes energy efficiency. The project is well-aligned with the Dartmouth Climate Collaborative, a $500 million initiative that has set the goal of eliminating campus carbon emissions by 2050.
âEven though weâre expanding the building, weâre reducing our overall energy usage by 25% by adding insulation, being thoughtful about how weâre building, and using more efficient systems to heat and cool the building,â Keniston says.
A look ahead
Core constructionâincluding electrical and other HVAC systems and drywall installationâwill be complete by mid-May, Keniston says. Then, throughout the late spring and summer, technical teams will install and test the buildingâs specialty equipment, digital lighting systems, and acoustics.
âItâs very exciting, because weâll be at the cutting edge of the technology, and our crews need to train on how to use all of it,â Aleskie says.
In September, the space will be ready to welcome faculty and students, and a public opening and dedication will be celebrated in the fall.
The Hop is expected to host student and faculty performances throughout the fall term, and visiting artists will return to its stages and workshops beginning in winter 2026.
The original Hop opened in 1962 and was designed by Wallace Harrison, who went on to incorporate many of its architectural elements into the design of the Metropolitan Opera House at New York Cityâs Lincoln Center, which opened four years later. SnĂžhettaâs expansion and renewal, which began in winter 2023, honors Harrisonâs original vision for the Hop while fully updating the building for the needs of the future.



