IIT is tucked between the Dan Ryan Expressway (90/94) and Michigan Avenue, just
a few blocks south of central Chicago.
Many of the IIT campus buildings were designed by great architects of
the mid-20th century; you may notice several buildings by Mies van der Rohe as you
make your way across campus.
All sessions of
the Symposium will be held in the auditorium of the CS building on the
IIT campus, at the corner of State Street and 31st Street.
Basic local arrangements information can be found in the next
few paragraphs,
but Wai Gen Yee
has provided a
much
more comprehensive reference
that tells you where to go once you arrive at the building, where to set
up your demo/poster, how to get wireless access, how to get to lunch
spots, and so on.
The Computer Science Department address is 10 West 31st Street, Chicago IL 60616,
marked as the "Stuart Building"
on the printable
campus map,
which also shows parking locations. You can also examine a
MapQuest map.
Parking will be free on Saturday.
If you take public transportation to IIT, then you have three options:
-
Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) Red Line (Howard-Dan Ryan) to Sox Stadium/35th Street station
-
CTA Green Line (Lake-Englewood-Jackson Park) train to 35th Street/Bronzeville station
-
CTA Bus lines with stops on State Street (#29 or #35) or Michigan Avenue
The CTA's web site, http://www.transitchicago.com, gives schedules and bus routes.
To drive to IIT:
-
From the North:
Take the Dan Ryan Expressway (90/94) east, and exit at 31st Street.
Turn left at the first intersection (31st Street).
In about half a mile, you will reach the intersection of State and
31st Streets. The Computer Science Department is in the
Stuart Building on the northwest corner of this intersection, and parking
is on the northeast and southeast corners.
-
From the South:
You will probably not be able to follow the directions for people
who are driving from the north, because the northbound
31st Street exit is closed for construction.
Here is an alternative for you:
Take the Dan Ryan Expressway (90/94) west, and exit at 35th Street.
You will find yourself driving north along S. La Salle Street.
Continue north on LaSalle until you reach 31st Street; turn right there.
In about half a mile, you will reach the intersection of State and
31st Streets. The Computer Science Department is in the
Stuart Building on the northwest corner of this intersection, and parking
is on the northeast and southeast corners.
-
From Lake Shore Drive:
Exit at 31st Street. Go inland (west) for about two miles, until you reach
the intersection of State Street and 31st.
The Computer Science Department is in the
Stuart Building on the northwest corner of this intersection, and parking
is on the northeast and southeast corners.
The printable
campus map
shows the large campus parking lots.
At lunch time, attendees can dine in the nearby Chinatown or Bridgeport
neighborhoods. Bridgeport is due west of IIT, and is centered at 31st and Normal Ave,
which is about a mile west of the CS building.
Chinatown is to the northwest, and is centered a bit east of Stewart Avenue and 23rd Place
which is about 2.5 miles northwest of the CS building.
Note that parking in Chinatown is notoriously difficult, and
Bridgeport may be congested because there is a White Sox game at
1PM that day.
You can read about Chinatown
lunch options and
Bridgeport
lunch options
at the Metromix web site.
Hotels
Last year's attendees found excellent hotel bargains by bidding on Priceline.
Business travellers occupy most Chicago hotel rooms, making it possible to
find excellent bargains on Friday and Saturday nights.
- The Gong Show (5-Minute Talks)
- Each speaker must present a poster
or a demo
later on that day.
- Each speaker has 5 minutes to
speak. At the end of that time, the
moderator rings a bell (the "gong") and the speaker must stop talking
immediately. Speakers do not have to use all of their allotted
time.
- Any time that the speaker needs to get
A/V materials working counts
as part of their 5 minutes. This strongly suggests that each
school
should have all their talks preassembled on a single laptop.
- The talk should be an advertisement for the poster/demo,
not a
description of it. In particular, the talk should try to convey
the following: What problem is being addressed? Why
should anyone care
about this problem, i.e., why is it important? What are the major
research issues associated with this problem, i.e., why is it
hard?
What is the general approach that the speaker is taking toward the
problem, i.e., why is the work interesting?
- Gong show talk slots are allocated in proportion to the
number of student attendees from each institution (see final program
above). Each school should choose its own gong show speakers and
the
order of their talks.
- Demos
- Each person presenting a demo should bring a laptop that
can run
the demo.
- Wireless internet access will be available
for demos. Power may not be available in the demo area, so precharge
laptop batteries.
- Everyone who wants to
do a demo can do one. Each school should choose their own demos.
- Posters
- We are renting easels for posters. The easels
will be set up in
the hallways of the CS building.
-
The easels will have an A-frame shape and will accept a poster on
stiff poster board. If your poster is floppy, then bring some small
clips with you so that you can clip it to the back of someone else's
(stiff) poster
to keep it from falling off the easel.
- The exact size and form of the poster is up to the
presenter, but
there will only be one easel per presenter.
- Easels will be allocated to schools in proportion to the
number of
students attending from that school and the number of posters that the
school wanted to present (see final program above). Each school
should
choose their own poster presenters. If your school will not be
using
all its allocated easels, please let the organizers know so that we can
make them
available to another school.
Symposium
Organization
Organizing
committee co-chairs
Chris Clifton, Purdue University
Marianne Winslett, University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign
Ouri Wolfson, University of Illinois at Chicago
Local arrangements chair
Wai Gen Yee, Illinois Institute of Technology
Organizing committee
Chris
Clifton and Hicham Elmongui, Purdue University
Jignesh Patel, University of Michigan
Beth Plale and Melanie Wu, Indiana University
Raghu Ramakrishan, University of Wisconsin
Peter Revesz, University of Nebraska at Lincoln
Peter Scheuermann, Northwestern University
Marianne Winslett, University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign
Ouri Wolfson, University of Illinois at Chicago
Wai Gen Yee, Illinois Institute of Technology