Hazel Barnes Flat
What is the Hazel Barnes Flat?
The Hazel Barnes Flat in London is a generous gift to scholars in the humanities and the arts from Hazel Barnes (1915-2008), the esteemed Professor of Philosophy at 鶹ѰBoulder, and Doris J. Schwalbe (1922-2007). The flat is intended for 鶹ѰBoulder faculty and graduate students who are conducting academic and professional research in the fields of humanities and the arts in Great Britain. The operation of the flat is entrusted to the Center for Humanities & the Arts. Conveniently situated within walking distance of Westminster Abbey, Tate Britain, and numerous other London attractions, the Hazel Barnes Flat offers an ideal location for scholars to reside while pursuing academic research in London.
About the Flat
- 1 bedroom (double bed)
- 2 baths
- 1 office/bedroom (single bed)
- Kitchen (coffee maker, electric water kettle, blender, stovetop and oven, refrigerator)
- Washer/Dryer
Eligibility
Applications from all 鶹ѰBoulder faculty and graduate students conducting humanistic or artistic research will be reviewed. Research proposals must have arts and/or humanities scope/theme/major focus.
- Faculty: Applicants must have a 鶹ѰBoulder faculty appointment at the time of application and that appointment must be active during the dates the flat is being requested. Adjunct/Lecturer positions are temporary and therefore ineligible.
- Graduate Students: Applicants must have an active 鶹ѰBoulder student status at the time of application and that appointment must be active during the dates the flat is being requested. Students on academic leave are ineligible.
- ٲڴ:鶹Ѱstaff are eligible if conducting research on behalf of faculty or unit.
- Retired Emeritus Faculty: faculty with "emeritus" status are eligible to use the flat within three years of their retirement from 鶹ѰBoulder. Retired emeritus faculty are not eligible for a travel award or to use the flat during peak periods (鶹ѰBoulder Fall/Spring & Winter Break, or summer between graduation and the first day of Fall semester)
Know before you apply
- Occupancy of the flat is limited to three persons (regardless of age) comprised of one household or one research team applying together. If a research team is applying, each person should submit an application, particularly if each person wants to be considered for a Schwalbe award. Research teams should coordinate so that their proposals are the same/similar.
- The flat has one double bed and one single bed. Occupants are not allowed to sleep on the couch.
- The flat may be requested for up to two weeks.
- Applicants are limited to one visit per academic or fiscal year: July 1-June 30. However, applicants cannot stay twice during a single summer/summer application period. Ex: you cannot stay June 15 and July 15 in the same year.
- Guests who have stayed in the flat five or more times may apply 60 days in advance of their desired travel dates and are not eligible to receive a travel award. Guests with more than 10 visits may apply 30 days in advance of their desired travel dates and are not eligible to receive a travel award.
Deadlines
We have updated the application process to the Hazel Barnes Flat to make access more equitable. Reservations are accepted no more than one year in advance of the requested travel dates* (exemptions apply, please read below). Additionally please note that there must be one whole day in-between reservations left empty-- so if you see a range of dates that look free between bookings, you will need to leave the dates before and after your stay open. Ex: If April 1-7 is booked and April 20-30 is booked, the reservation you can request is April 9-18 because April 8 and April 19 must be left empty for the cleaners.
TRAVEL DATES | Application Deadline |
---|---|
Before May 15, 2025 | Rolling deadline: consult the for available dates--see above for leaving whole dates free between reservations for the cleaners. |
FALL August 16-December 31 | FEBRUARY 15 |
SPRING January 1-May 15 | MAY 15 |
SUMMER May 16-August 15 | NOVEMBER 15 |
Deadline Exemptions
Rolling applications will be accepted at any time for the following scenarios:
- Missed a deadline? The shows available dates for rolling applications (availability changes due to rescheduling, and cancellations). Also please note the bullet point below.
- The flat must be empty for at least an entire day between stays--therefore, if it looks like there's a gap in the calendar of one day you cannot stay in that gap--that is reserved for the management company to clean the flat and take care of repairs.
- Past visitors to the flat who have visited more than 5 times or more than 10 times who must wait to apply 60-days and 30-days respectively to apply.
Travel Award
Applicants to the flat may be eligible to receive a Schwalbe travel award, provided that they have not received an award in the past year. The awards are on a sliding scale:
- Graduate Students: $1,500
- Non-tenured track faculty and staff: $1,200
- Assistant Professors: $1000
- Associate Professors with tenure: $750
- Full Professors with tenure: $500
If an applicant receives a Schwalbe award they cannot simultaneously receive a GRADE or Small Grant award for the same research project/period that they will be using the flat. In other words, you cannot double dip in CHA funding for the same research since we have more applicants who come to us than we have funds.
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Selection Criteria
Applications will be reviewed by a sub-committee in the Center for Humanities & the Arts. The committee will determine priority should conflicting dates arise. Selection criteria are based on:
- applicants from the humanities and the arts fields will be given priority; however, applications from all 鶹ѰBoulder faculty and graduate students conducting humanistic or artistic research will be reviewed, so long as the project has arts and/or humanities scope/theme/major focus.
- the overall quality and benefit of the project
- the candidate's demonstrated need to be in London during a specific time period (for a conference, exhibition, presentation, etc)
- the applicant’s prior use of the flat
Application Process
- Research Statement: submit a statement that explains how using the flat will benefit your scholarly and/or artistic research in the arts and humanities; and why you need to be in London and using the flat to accomplish it. Be as specific and detailed as possible when listing venues you plan to visit and whom you plan to interview/collaborate with.
- Submit an application form
Contact hazelbarnesflat@colorado.edu with questions
After Approval Policies
- The University requires all international travelers to request prior to booking their trip
- All flat occupants must complete the Occupancy Agreement at least three weeks prior to their visit
- Within thirty days of vacating the flat, applicants must submit a written summary of activities and research completed. Failure to do so automatically forfeits future applications
- Each successful applicant will receive information about the flat
- Dates of travel may be adjusted depending on illness, family emergencies, etc
- Any approved applicants and travelers must adhere to University, U.S., and U.K. travel restrictions, requirements, and guidelines at the time of their travel.
Giving credit to the CHA
Acknowledgment of the Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) is required on all published materials for funded projects as a result of your use of the flat. Use this language for print and verbal credit: “This project is supported, in part, by a grant from the Center for Humanities & the Arts”
Download the Center for Humanities & the Arts logo .
The Hazel Barnes Flat residence aims to support the purpose outlined by the generosity of Hazel Barnes, Doris Schwalbe, The Center for Humanities & the Arts and the University of Colorado UK Foundation to provide eligible 鶹ѰBoulder faculty and graduate students the opportunity to conduct scholarly research activities in and around London.
Thanks to more than $3 million in estate gifts from two University of Colorado faculty members, Hazel Barnes and Doris Schwalbe, CU-Boulder is the beneficiary of this London property. This flat makes CU-Boulder one of just a handful of major American universities with a residential presence in the U.K., and gives faculty and students a rare opportunity to pursue select projects within striking distance of important literary, artistic, and political venues.
This opportunity is possible because long-time CU-Boulder philosophy professor Hazel Barnes and her partner and 鶹ѰDenver English professor Doris Schwalbe both left a portion of their estate to the University through the 鶹ѰFoundation. Barnes’ bequest included the explicit stipulation that the funds be used to purchase and maintain a flat in London for use by CU-Boulder scholars with projects in the arts and humanities and to support their research. Schwalbe, who taught English at 鶹ѰDenver for 24 years, had jointly agreed to support this idea years before their passing and bequeathed a portion of her estate for these same purposes. Schwalbe passed away in 2007, and Barnes passed away in 2008.
Their combined gifts are the largest made to support the humanities at CU-Boulder in many years. These gifts help CU-Boulder take a big step toward a Flagship 2030 strategic goal: bringing the world to 鶹Ѱand 鶹Ѱto the world.
“This will be an extraordinary means of supporting faculty and student research in the humanities and arts,” says former graduate school dean John Stevenson, who played a role in the property purchase along with the 鶹ѰReal Estate Foundation. “It means that researchers who need to work in London’s unmatched research collections will not have to raise funds for lodging or pay for it themselves; this will allow more scholars to conduct research there and be able to stay longer.”
Stevenson says universities nationwide are striving to bolster their presence internationally. “This is an emerging model. Notre Dame has a building in London. Harvard has a presence in Florence. North Carolina State has a place in Prague,” Stevenson says. “Students all around 鶹Ѱwill benefit, in that the faculty doing research will take that research into the classroom. And it will be an extraordinary asset in faculty/graduate student recruiting.”
The gifts not only funded the purchase of the London flat but also funded an endowment that covers the flat’s maintenance and operation costs in perpetuity, as well as program funds that assist faculty and graduate students with travel expenses.
Hazel Barnes, whose translation of Jean-Paul Sartre’s Being and Nothingness helped introduce existentialism to America, taught at CU-Boulder for 33 years, and is the namesake for the University’s most prestigious teaching and research prize, the Hazel Barnes Prize. She held positions in the classics department, as chair of the Center for Interdisciplinary Studies, and in the department of philosophy. Internationally renowned in her field, Barnes is the recipient of many awards including the 鶹ѰRegents Medal, the Colorado Humanities Award, a Mellon professorship, and a Guggenheim fellowship. Barnes also founded CU-Boulder’s humanities program, one of the nation’s first interdisciplinary programs.
Barnes firmly believed that time spent abroad was vital for a well-rounded scholarly perspective. In 1991 she said, “London is not only a center for research in English literature, it’s a place that scholars of every kind might find important.” She added, “For a person who is involved in any sort of work in literature and philosophy, living abroad is very important.”
Just as scientists conduct research in laboratories, humanities scholars use libraries and museums. Often, a scholar must travel to the source of needed research materials – to London for records of Elizabethan drama, or to Athens for archeology. Diminishing University resources, coupled with the exorbitant costs of travel and lodging, can limit scholars’ access to the tools of their trade. Barnes and Schwalbe recognized this. Wanting to help make available the “laboratories” of the world for their colleagues, through their bequests, they provided scholars with a place to stay in London when traveling to the great museums and libraries of England.
“We know how important it is for scholars to go to the great universities abroad, and London is an obvious center. We’ve realized the educational value of travel, of living in a place for a period of time and getting to know the people,” Barnes remarked. As specialists in philosophy and literature, Professors Barnes and Schwalbe travelled a great deal to study their subjects and see the world?
After receiving her Ph.D. from Boulder in 1962, Schwalbe taught in the English department at 鶹ѰDenver for 24 years on the subject of the English novel. Her research specialty was Courtesy Literature, handbooks for the young pages who served in aristocratic households in the 16th and 17th centuries. These guides were later used to set standards for proper young women, and were the precursors to today’s etiquette books.
Schwalbe believed that one of the greatest benefits of a faculty house in London would be freedom – freedom to travel, live comfortably, and study in a pleasant environment. “This is something which will enrich the lives of faculty and graduate students, personally and professionally, and will broaden their experience beyond CU,” Barnes added.
“We have very much appreciated what 鶹Ѱhas offered us and want to help its faculty and its students,” both concluded.
The University’s Center for Humanities & the Arts administers the use of the London property and the distribution of program funds, with priority given to faculty and graduate students conducting research in the arts and humanities.
Since November 2010, the property has been used regularly by University faculty, Ph.D. candidates and graduate students from a variety of disciplines primarily focused in the arts and humanities.