New buildings spark excitement for Polytechnic campus


<p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">MESA, Ariz. — When David Schwalm learned that Governor Napolitano and the state legislature appropriated money to fund the debt service on $103 million to pay for the construction of new facilities on Arizona State University's Polytechnic campus, he was looking at the enrollment growth figures for fall 2006 semester and wondering where he was going to put all of those students.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">&quot;When I learned that the funds had finally been approved, I realized that our dream of transforming this former air force base into a university campus with real university buildings was actually going to come true,&quot; said Schwalm, ASU vice provost of academic programs and services for the campus.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">The new complex of buildings will be the largest project undertaken to date on the campus. The new facilities will be instructional buildings, filled with faculty and staff offices, classrooms, and teaching laboratories, all of which will help to better accommodate the rapidly growing number of faculty and students on the Polytechnic campus.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">&quot;At the present time, we are totally out of faculty offices, and we are currently housing 15-20 faculty in the first floor of one of our residence halls,&quot; said Schwalm.  &quot;We also are at maximum utilization of our classrooms, and we need more specialized classrooms to serve some of our programs, like our new engineering program.&quot;</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">While the groundbreaking is only a week away, planning for the new facilities began in fall 2005 in anticipation of future growth as well as future funding. Conversations among the university architects, Polytechnic campus administrators and the faculty took place often, fitting the need for new instructional space into the master plan for the campus.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">Initially the group began to plan for 300,000 square feet of new space. Once the funds were allocated and the architects and contractors were selected in July of 2006, the planning process </span><span lang="en-us">intensified. </span><span lang="en-us">Then reality set in. </span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">&quot;With rising building costs, the scope of the project contracted a bit,&quot; said Schwalm. &quot;We are now planning for 240,000 gross square feet. We have made a special effort to increase the ratio of net square feet to gross square feet by creating useful outdoor space  as well as indoor space. We expect the net to be greater than the usual 65 percent of the gross.&quot; </span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">The Architects of Record RSP Architects, the Design Architect Lake/Flato and the contractor DPR Construction have designed three &quot;complexes&quot; of buildings. Two of the three complexes will be located directly north of the Agribusiness Center and the new Engineering Studio, resulting in the loss of parking lots north of those two facilities and the demolition of one older facility, which is currently the College of Technology and Innovation Dean's Office. An existing auditorium, with a capacity for 500 people will be remodeled and incorporated into the newer structures.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">In addition, the former dining hall, east of Wanner and Sutton Halls, will be razed to make room for the third complex. It will house faculty in education, arts and humanities, and social sciences. This complex also will have a &quot;black box&quot; theater and special facilities to support dance, drawing and painting.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">To replace the lost parking spaces, plans call for an extension of the parking lot to the south of the Agribusiness and Technology centers and Engineering Studio. &quot;We will have enough parking spaces to accommodate students, faculty and staff, though, some may have to walk slightly further to classes or offices,&quot; said Schwalm.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">&quot;Pedestrian patterns will be disrupted by the construction, but the contractors have developed a logistics plan to ensure that pedestrians have safe, well lit and reasonably direct walking routes to campus buildings,&quot; explained Schwalm.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">It's anticipated that the facilities will be sufficient to support about 10,000 students, an enrollment figure that is expected to be met by 2012. Occupancy of the new buildings is scheduled for June 1, 2008.</span></p><separator></separator><p class="style2" align="left"><span lang="en-us">ASU will celebrate the founders of the Polytechnic campus, while planning for the campus's future on Nov. 3, with a groundbreaking for the new facilities set for 5 p.m. in front of the former dining hall. Following the groundbreaking will be a 10th anniversary celebration, with a reception and Academic Expo, recognizing new research, colleges/schools and facilities.</span></p>