This Article in the Star Tribune reports on the UST's plans for a new student center and athletic facilities.
The article mentions, briefly, the participation of WSNAC and community members in the planning stages, but it leaves out the still unsettled controversy surrounding increased traffic and parking concerns.
Here's the article in its entirety:
St. Thomas trustees OK plans for athletic complex
By MARY LYNN SMITH, Star Tribune
February 20, 2009
As competition between colleges for new students gets tougher, the University of St.
Thomas will buff itself up with a new $52 million athletic and recreation complex and a $66
million student center on the university's main campus in St. Paul.
The project, another significant expansion of the school's presence in St. Paul, is the
largest in the university's history. Unlike previous construction efforts, it doesn't appear to
be inciting acrimony with neighborhood residents.
"This is a way of simply making sure we have the type of facilities that will help attract
students to the campus 10 and 15 years from now," said Mark Dienhart, the university's
executive vice president and chief operating officer.
In recent years, the university devoted a lot of time and money to building a downtown
Minneapolis campus and a law school, he said.
"While we were doing that, many of Minnesota's private colleges where we cross over with
applicants were building these kind of facilities," Dienhart said. "Our primary athletic facility
was built in 1939, and the student center was built for a population of 2,000."
St. Thomas' enrollment now totals nearly 11,000 with 7,460 students on the St. Paul
campus.
"These type of facilities, which are very important to students, just didn't match up to the
type of schools they were considering when they were looking at St. Thomas," Dienhart
said. "So we lost some students. We're trying to ensure the viability of the institution."
The university's board of trustees approved plans for the athletic and recreation complex
on Thursday, and construction will begin in late May. The 180,000-square-foot complex, to
be located east of the university's football stadium, is scheduled to be opened in fall 2010.
The board discussed the athletic complex in October but held off on approval because of
concerns about the weakened economy.
"Thanks to the support of generous contributors, we are able to move forward," said the
Rev. Dennis Dease, president of St. Thomas.
Construction of the proposed 240,000-square-foot student center, if approved next year by
the board of trustees, would begin in fall 2010 and be completed by February 2012.
The two projects and a 725-car parking ramp that opened earlier this week all will be
named for Lee and Penny Anderson, who made a $60 million gift to St. Thomas in 2007. It
is believed to be the largest single contribution by an individual or a couple to a college or
university in Minnesota and is part of St. Thomas' $500 million fundraising drive, which has raised $365 million to date.
The projects will be a bit of a boost to the local economy at a time when a downturn in
new construction has left many workers unemployed, Dienhart said.
The new facilities will significantly change the appearance of St. Thomas along both
Summit and Cretin avenues. But unlike the last major construction project, they likely will
rouse little if any neighborhood rancor.
A five-year feud over a campus expansion ended in 2004 after both sides drew up a 14-
page agreement that included establishing campus boundaries and the 12-member West
Summit Neighborhood Advisory Committee, a group of neighborhood and university
representatives who collaborate on issues concerning the campus and neighborhood.
"Our goal is peaceful coexistence," said Scott Banas, the advisory group's neighborhood
co-chair. "And we've been successful beyond my wildest dreams."
Before the parking ramp was built, the advisory group hashed out concerns, and the plans
were redrawn until the design was agreeable to both sides, Banas said.
The advisory group has been tweaking plans for the athletic complex for more than a
year, Banas said. "There's really been no major blow-up," he said. The "compromising
and conciliation" process will continue with plans for the student center, with the group
probably allaying neighborhood concerns about parking and pedestrian safety, he said.
The $15 million Anderson Parking Facility that opened earlier this month will allow the
university to close its parking lot at Summit and Cretin avenues. This will free up space for
the athletic complex, student center and a larger quadrangle. Some existing buildings also
will be replaced.
The new athletic complex will feature:
•A 2,000-seat basketball and volleyball arena.
•An aquatic center containing an eight-lane, 25-meter swimming pool and diving area.
•A new field house with a 200-meter track.
•A west wing with a fitness center, weight room and aerobic rooms on the first floor and
offices, classrooms and labs on the second and third floors.
Mary Lynn Smith • 612-673-4788
(c) Star Tribune 2009
Sunday, February 22, 2009
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Gail Fenske Lecture 7:00 PM tonight--don't miss!
From the University Club newsletter:
"Once the world’s tallest skyscraper, the Woolworth Building is noted for its striking but incongruous synthesis of Beaux-Arts architecture, fanciful Gothic ornamentation, and audacious steel-framed engineering. In the first history of this great urban landmark, Gail Fenske argues that its design serves as a compelling lens through which to view the distinctive urban culture of Progressive-era New York."
"Once the world’s tallest skyscraper, the Woolworth Building is noted for its striking but incongruous synthesis of Beaux-Arts architecture, fanciful Gothic ornamentation, and audacious steel-framed engineering. In the first history of this great urban landmark, Gail Fenske argues that its design serves as a compelling lens through which to view the distinctive urban culture of Progressive-era New York."
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Upcoming Architecture Lecture
February 17, 2009
Gail Fenske will be at the University Club (420 Summit) to Speak on Her Book, The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York.
Gail Fenske, Professor of Architecture at the School of Art, Architecture and Historic Preservation, Rogers Williams University, will speak on her book, The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York, why she wrote it and what it meant to her.
Following her talk, Dr. Fenske will answer questions and sign copies of her book. Refreshments will be served. Admission is free to Cass Gilbert Society members and students with ID; the charge is $5.00 for non-members.
Gail Fenske is also the author of “The Image of the City: The Woolworth Building and the Creation of the New York Skyline,” a chapter in Cass Gilbert: Life and Work, edited by Barbara Christen and Steven Flanders (W. W. Norton, 2001), and “Cass Gilbert’s Skyscrapers in New York: The Twentieth-Century City and the Urban Picturesque,” in Inventing the Skyline: The Architecture of Cass Gilbert (Columbia University Press, 2000)
Gail Fenske will be at the University Club (420 Summit) to Speak on Her Book, The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York.
Gail Fenske, Professor of Architecture at the School of Art, Architecture and Historic Preservation, Rogers Williams University, will speak on her book, The Skyscraper and the City: The Woolworth Building and the Making of Modern New York, why she wrote it and what it meant to her.
Following her talk, Dr. Fenske will answer questions and sign copies of her book. Refreshments will be served. Admission is free to Cass Gilbert Society members and students with ID; the charge is $5.00 for non-members.
Gail Fenske is also the author of “The Image of the City: The Woolworth Building and the Creation of the New York Skyline,” a chapter in Cass Gilbert: Life and Work, edited by Barbara Christen and Steven Flanders (W. W. Norton, 2001), and “Cass Gilbert’s Skyscrapers in New York: The Twentieth-Century City and the Urban Picturesque,” in Inventing the Skyline: The Architecture of Cass Gilbert (Columbia University Press, 2000)
Monday, February 2, 2009
Music in the Hill House... Tonight!
If you haven't been to the JJ Hill House, or just haven't been there lately, here's a fun event!
The Schubert Club Presents a Hill House Parlor Concert
The Schubert Club brings to you the the classical sounds of the Hill House Chamber Players. They will perform tonight live in the restored art gallery of this beautiful Summit Avenue mansion.
Tonight's program includes "Four Duets, Opus 39", for violin and cello by Reinhold Glier; "The Turning of the Year" for flute and guitar by Jeffrey Van; "Sonata, Op. 16," for flute, viola and guitar by Joseph Kreutzer; and a String Quintet by W.A. Mozart. Enjoy complimentary refreshments during intermission, then top it all off with a tour of the mansion following the performance.
7:30 p.m. Monday 2/2/09, James J. Hill House, 240 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, $16; $14 for MHS members or Schubert Club subscribers
The Schubert Club Presents a Hill House Parlor Concert
The Schubert Club brings to you the the classical sounds of the Hill House Chamber Players. They will perform tonight live in the restored art gallery of this beautiful Summit Avenue mansion.
Tonight's program includes "Four Duets, Opus 39", for violin and cello by Reinhold Glier; "The Turning of the Year" for flute and guitar by Jeffrey Van; "Sonata, Op. 16," for flute, viola and guitar by Joseph Kreutzer; and a String Quintet by W.A. Mozart. Enjoy complimentary refreshments during intermission, then top it all off with a tour of the mansion following the performance.
7:30 p.m. Monday 2/2/09, James J. Hill House, 240 Summit Avenue, St. Paul, $16; $14 for MHS members or Schubert Club subscribers
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