
Signal flags spelling "Spiess Hall" fly from the railing of the building newly named for Fred Spiess. (Jan. 23, 2009)
Spiess Hall of Fame
Newly named Scripps building honors late, legendary oceanographer Fred Spiess
A string of 10 colorful Navy signal flags spelling "Spiess Hall"
flew from the railing of the formerly named Scripps Nierenberg Hall
Annex (NTV) building on Jan. 23. The whimsical hoist was set for a
re-naming of the building in recognition of the exceptional life and
career of late, legendary oceanographer Fred Noel Spiess of Scripps
Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego.
Spiess, who died in 2006, had been affiliated with Scripps
Oceanography since 1952 and was a distinguished scientist and former
director of Scripps. At the time of his death, Spiess was a
professor emeritus of oceanography at the Scripps Marine Physical
Laboratory and had a successful scientific career that spanned more
than 50 years. During this period, he had an enormous impact on
ocean sciences as a sea-going researcher who led an average of two
major oceanographic expeditions a year for more than 40 years. The
newly named Spiess Hall building was built in 1999 and many of its
occupants are members of the Marine Physical Laboratory, which
Spiess helped establish.
"Having his name on this building feels as though his presence is
anchored in the part of the world and with the people that he loved
best" said Spiess' daughter, Katherine Spiess-Dallaire, to a crowd
of more than 100 celebrating the building's new namesake. "We hope
this building will be a place where people gather in the halls and
labs, share ideas and stories, and think about our world in new
ways."
Spiess was widely known for his contributions to the development of
innovative ocean technology. He was tireless in defining new ways to
look at the deep ocean and seafloor. He designed and built
instruments, took them to sea for deployment, and led numerous
expeditions to investigate the deepest parts of the world's oceans.
"When we think of Fred, we think of him as an embodiment of the inventive, adventurous, and collaborative spirit that has driven Scripps' excellence since its founding, said Scripps Director Tony Haymet."
Spiess was also co-inventor of the one-of-a-kind research platform called FLIP, the Floating Instrument Platform, almost 50 years ago. FLIP, still in use today, is towed out to sea, then its ballast tanks are flooded, causing a 90-degree horizontal-to-vertical flip. This vertical orientation creates a stable platform for conducting research at sea.
—Shannon Casey
February 2009
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