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Campus construction roundup
One new
campus building opened this spring while the status of several other construction
projects ranges from conception to completion.
At the site of the original Notre Dame
Hammes Bookstore now stands a much larger, $14 million gothic structure
housing the Coleman Family Center for Campus Ministry and the James
and Leah Rae Morse Center for Academic Services. Expected to open in April,
the building has separate entrances for the Coleman Center facing the
South Quad and for the Morse Center facing the lakes.
The Coleman Center houses Campus Ministry facilities for programs in
spirituality, retreats and campus liturgies, all of which used to be confined
to the first floor of Badin Hall (next door), plus a chapel, rehearsal
space for campus choirs and a classroom for religious education.
The Morse Center consists of offices for the First Year of Studies program,
formerly in a small, 146-year-old building next to Brownson Hall, and
for Academic Services for Student Athletes, which had been in Brownson
since 1995.
The Coleman-Morse building also contains a computer cluster, student
social space, a satellite office of the Center for Social Concerns, and
a room named for Jerry and Dorene Hammes (of campus bookstore fame) in
honor of their financial support of Campus Ministry.
Other current construction projects:
-- The Marie P. DeBartolo Performing Arts Center. The ceremonial groundbreaking
is scheduled for May on this long-awaited facility at the south end of
campus. The $55 million structure will house a 900-seat concert hall,
a 350-seat main stage theater, a 200-seat cinema, and two other performance
spaces. It's expected to be finished in 2003.
-- South Bend Center for Medical Education. This building, planned for
the southeast corner of Notre Dame Avenue and Angela Boulevard, will house
the joint Notre Dame and Indiana University medical school, which since
1971 has been located in the basement of Haggar Hall and a World War II-era
Quonset hut behind Haggar. Construction has been delayed by problems removing
asbestos from the building that used to stand there, the Northern Indiana
State Development Center. No completion date has been set. Also moving
to the new building, from Nieuwland, will be Notre Dame's Walther Cancer
Research Center.
-- Hesburgh Center for International Studies addition. Work is scheduled
to begin in May on this $2.6 million project to add office space for the
Kellogg Institute for International Studies.
-- Visiting faculty housing. The University is building 24 apartments
for visiting professors in the Fischer Graduate Residences townhouse complex.
Severe winter weather has pushed back the targeted completion date to
next spring.
Nearing completion:
-- The Philosophy and Theology Building, which will provide offices
for professors in those departments. The building is expected to open
in August.
-- Renovation of the Hayes-Healy and Hurley buildings. The mathematics
department and international studies will begin relocating to these connected
buildings this spring. The renovation project began with asbestos removal
in February 2000.
Still on the drawing board: an elaborate $70 million science teaching
facility planned for the east side of Juniper Road just north of the Joyce
Center. Construction isn't scheduled to begin until 2003.
-- Megan Strader '01
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