Members of the Colgate community gathered on Aug. 15 for the dedication of the Clearing, a new campus space formed by an arc of trees that have been planted along a bend in Payne Creek as it winds toward Taylor Lake.

As part of the Third-Century Plan’s focus on sustainability and campus beautification, the University recently removed several oak trees — which had reached the end of their lifespan — from Oak Drive in an effort to renew the iconic entrance to campus. One of those trees was the site of the November 2000 car crash that took the lives of four young people, including Colgate student Katie Almeter ’04. In building the Clearing nearby, landscape architects included four new benches (joining two existing benches on the site), made with wood reclaimed from that tree, as a tribute to the memory of those lost in the accident.

The tree planting for the Clearing complements the University’s goals to naturalize the Payne Creek floodplain. The effort also diversifies and replenishes the campus tree canopy by planting 19 trees from seven different species.

Aside from one golden weeping willow (native to Europe) planted near Willow Path, all of the trees planted are native to the northeastern United States: red maple, beech, black gum, hop hornbeam, sycamore, and swamp white oak. Their canopy will thrive in wet conditions, increasing resilience to flooding, creating habitat, and providing enduring beauty.

President Brian W. Casey acknowledged the anonymous donor who has made these projects possible, noting that, “As these trees grow, a room will appear. A corner of nature, slightly removed, a place apart, a special place.” It will be, “a place to gather, to read a book on a warm day, to stop and look up.”

In his remarks, Vice President and Dean of the College Paul McLoughlin invited community members to use the Clearing as a space to connect with one another.

“Community takes root in spaces where we can sit together, where we can hear one another’s story, and happen upon a new friend,” he said. “And community honors the legacy of the lives, contributions, and ideas of those who come before us. Students, visitors, and many more will carry forward the spirit of community that we feel and honor here today and every day.”

Bob Almeter, Katie’s father, closed the event with his own hopes for the Clearing and its place in the heart of the campus community. “It’s my hope and my prayer that, in this space, whoever chooses to come and sit here will be able to find that peace and that calm in the whisper of the wind.”