Peter Brenton is our amazing general administrative contact for the department, and the person who takes care of the space. Pete sends an e-mail regarding spaces at the beginning of every school year.  This information was gleaned from previous years' e-mails.

Whom to Contact (Pete Brenton)

Basic rules about office space

Existing students, please be nice to incoming students and "share" the furnishings and space fairly with them.

Every NSE Graduate office should have the following;

Let Pete Brenton know ASAP if any of these things are missing, not working, or working poorly.  Also talk to Pete if you have special needs.  See the end of this message before telling me the heat or A/C is broken. 

Some offices are shabbier than others (they're older buildings that have seen a lot of students come and go). Pete Brenton has been renovating offices slowly, but it is expensive and takes time.  Meanwhile you have some reasonable expectations you can act on; paint should not be peeling off, insulation around piping should be neat and nicely wrapped, walls should not have holes, pipes should not leak, windows that open should also close, your feet should be on solid flooring.  These things can be repaired.  Email or call Pete Brenton or go straight to facilities at 3-4948 or the website for reporting repairs at http://atlas.mit.edu.

Do's and Don'ts

 

Services available, and how to handle issues

Environmental systems: heat, radiators, A/C, ventilation, windows

This is primarily for the people in NW12, NW13, NW14 and Building 24.


Please be considerate of your office mates when making adjustments to the temperature.

 

Energy conservation

The following are energy saving requests: Remember that your tuition pays in part for MIT's energy costs

  1. Please shut off the air conditioning when no one is in the room
  2. Please do not run air conditioning in the summer or the heat in the winter with the windows open.
  3. Please do not operate air conditioners and heat at the same time.
  4. If your office will be empty for an extended period of time, lower the heat setting and close all windows.