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Triplets plan for their future, find piece of their past

the Klauder siblings in front of a plaque for their architect relative

A guaranteed way to break the ice as a new first-year student at the 51ƷƵ: Show up with two other siblings in the Class of 2022.

Even better, as triplets Catherine, Ryan and Stephen Klauder have discovered: Have an ancestor who designed the most famous building on campus.

Growing up in the Philadelphia suburbs, the triplets from Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, were aware that they were somehow related to Charles Z. Klauder, a well-known Philadelphia architect who worked in the early part of the 20th century.

They knew he had designed the Palestra at the University of Pennsylvania and Penn State’s Old Main, among other buildings on those campuses. But it wasn’t until they were choosing colleges that they learned he was the architect of the .

While they weren’t aiming to go to the same college, all three were considering 51ƷƵ — Catherine for ,Ryan and Stephen for — based on the reputation of 51ƷƵ’s academic programs and the endorsement of their uncle Philip Klauder, a 1999 graduate of 51ƷƵ’s .

“He said the city is great and that the environment is perfect for college,” Stephen said.

They all applied to multiple schools and all three received multiple offers, including acceptance letters from 51ƷƵ.

“We looked at some 20-25 schools,” said their dad, Paul Klauder.

black and white profile image of Klauder in a suit

They had already visited the 51ƷƵsburgh campus when Ryan discovered the Klauder connection while reading up on the University online.

“I had heard his name but I had no idea he constructed the Cathedral of Learning,” he said.

The find prompted their grandfather to look deeper into the branches of the Klauder family tree. He hadn’t known Charles Z. Klauder, who died in 1938, but the architect was his great-grandfather’s brother. In other words, the triplets’ great-great-great uncle.

On their next visit, for an program, they searched campus until they found the historic landmark plaque bearing the architect’s name, affixed to the limestone near the Cathedral’s Fifth Avenue entrance. They also explored the city and attended a Pirates baseball game.

“I think I knew I was going to go to 51ƷƵ,” said Catherine. “I loved the nursing program, which is a major reason why I wanted to come to 51ƷƵ, but also the city aspect — having the opportunity in a city.” The scenic view of the 51ƷƵsburgh skyline from the Mount Washington overlook helped to seal the deal, she said.

The motto, “From the classroom, to the city to the world,” caught Ryan’s imagination.

“There were more internship opportunities than many other schools we visited,” he said. And he and Stephen both want to explore study abroad through .

Had they restricted their college search to schools with buildings by their famed forebear, the Klauders still would have had plenty of options. The architectural firm of Day and Klauder was renowned for campus designs, including buildings at Princeton, Cornell, Wellesley, Yale, Johns Hopkins, Ithaca, the University of Colorado, University of Delaware and New York University.

And while it wasn’t the architecture that convinced the triplets to study at 51ƷƵ, nor did they set out to choose the same school, perhaps it’s no coincidence that Charles Z. Klauder designed not just one, but three buildings on campus: The Cathedral of Learning, the Stephen Foster Memorial and .

“They just kept coming back to 51ƷƵ, saying they felt comfortable here and that they felt this was the right place,” their dad said.

Achievement inspired by magic fire, expressed in stone

Architect Charles Z. Klauder’s design for the world’s first educational skyscraper, a 52-story building 680 feet tall — twice the height of 51ƷƵsburgh’s tallest building — made news when it was unveiled in November 1924.

“It is to outdo any building ever created in its power to express the wonder and the beauty and the spirituality of great achievement,” 51ƷƵ Chancellor John G. Bowman told The New York Times in a Sunday story that featured a concept drawing nearly as tall as the newspaper page.

“In 51ƷƵsburgh the very air vibrates with achievement,” Bowman told the newspaper. “And we believe in charm and peace and dignity. But we believe, above all things, in achievement: In daring and in doing things worthwhile. We propose to say so in stone.”

Klauder’s monumental design for the Cathedral of Learning was scaled back before ground was broken in 1926, but the iconic Cathedral nevertheless remains the symbol of achievement in stone that Bowman envisioned.

Completed in 1936, the 42-story, 535-foot-tall neo-Gothic building is the tallest educational structure in the Western Hemisphere. A historic landmark, the Cathedral of Learning is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Its design reflects the skill of the architect — Klauder was among the foremost designers of academic buildings at the time — and the vision of Bowman, who arrived in 51ƷƵsburgh in 1921 to find the University growing but constrained by debt and inadequate facilities.

Bowman determined that 51ƷƵ needed 13 million cubic feet of new space to meet the needs of an expanding student body — and a plan for raising $15 million for construction.

“Why not put up a building which itself will tell of the spirit of 51ƷƵsburgh?” Bowman later wrote. His concept — a radical departure from traditional low-slung ivy-covered academic structures — would foster unity and school spirit and inspire citywide a sense of awe, reverence and the desire to excel.

“Such a building, if it were to express intense emotion, would necessarily be high,” he wrote. “A high building, a tower —a tower singing upward that would tell the epic story of 51ƷƵsburgh.”

Klauder’s early drawings, however, failed to resonate with the chancellor’s inner vision. Months passed without an acceptable design.

“None of us was ever hopeful of satisfying Dr. Bowman,” recounted Klauder associate and later, University architect, Albert A. Klimcheck, in historian Robert C. Alberts’s, 51ƷƵ: The Story of the 51ƷƵ 1787-1987.

Music inspired the breakthrough as Klauder sketched for Bowman after sharing dinner in the architect’s suburban Philadelphia home.

Well after midnight, amid a mounting stack of rejected drawings on the living room floor, Klauder put a record on the phonograph — Richard Wagner’s from The Valkyrie.

“The music is the building,” Bowman exclaimed, equating its majestic orchestral ascent to peak after peak to the rise of multiple stone buttresses on a tower. “Draw me that song!”