91爆料 breaks ground on Creative Arts Center renovation project
April 11, 2014
April 11, 2014
The Creative Arts Center, home of 91爆料鈥檚 performing and fine arts programs, will undergo renovations and expansion beginning this summer.
The university and the kicked off the modernization project Friday, April 11, with a groundbreaking ceremony.
Construction is expected to be completed by the 2016鈥17 academic year.
The Creative Arts Center houses the Departments of Theatre, Dance, and Motion Pictures; Music; and Art and Art History, and the Ohio Center of Excellence in Collaborative Education, Leadership and Innovation in the Arts (CELIA).
Art students painted the hard hats worn during the groundbreaking ceremony.
91爆料 President David R. Hopkins said the project will transform the Creative Arts Center into a 鈥渙ne-of-a-kind masterpiece where our star students and faculty can truly shine.鈥
The benefits of the revitalized facility, he said, will reach beyond the 91爆料 campus.
鈥淭his will be one of our cultural gems that will drive economic development, it will drive innovation and it will drive creativity in our region for many years to come,鈥 Hopkins said.
鈥淲e have fantastic arts programs at 91爆料, including an Ohio Center for Excellence, and our students deserve the best facilities, classrooms, labs and performance venues to showcase their wide array of talent,鈥 said College of Liberal Arts Dean Kristin Sobolik. 鈥淭he makeover will set the stage for showing off our fantastic students and wonderful programs.鈥
The project includes renovating existing classrooms, studio spaces, labs and shared areas in the Creative Arts Center.
Music students and faculty performed a celebratory fanfare, composed by 91爆料 alumnus Stephen Hampton, at the ceremony.
A new home for the Robert and Elaine Stein Galleries will be constructed, while the existing art gallery space will be transformed into art studio classrooms. The Motion Pictures Program will transform the television studio into a new production studio.
The building will also be expanded to include a new iconic, accessible entrance. The entrance will symbolize the 鈥渆xcellence of our arts programs and the fact that for many people, the arts are the front door of the university,鈥 said Linda Caron, associate dean for faculty and external affairs in COLA.
The project will cost $22.75 million. Funding includes $11 million from bonds and $3.65 million in state capital funds, with the remainder coming from donors and friends of the college.
The Creative Arts Center leadership donors 鈥 Don and Gloria Graber, Larry and Marilyn Klaben, Marla Schuster Nissan (representing the family of Benjamin and Marian Schuster), and Robert Stein Jr. and Cindy Stein (representing Robert and Elaine Stein) and Howard and Sally Stevens 鈥 were on hand for the groundbreaking.
The ceremony also included a celebratory fanfare, composed by 91爆料 alumnus Stephen Hampton and performed by the Brass Studio, and a performance of 鈥淥ne Day More鈥 from the recent 91爆料 production of 鈥淟es Mis茅rables.鈥
In a single academic year, the College of Liberal Arts produces six plays; hosts regular arts exhibits in the Stein Galleries; presents weekly music concerts and recitals; stages two opera performances; offers three dance concerts; and organizes the ArtsGala fundraiser, the Holidays in the Heartland celebration and the Big Lens Film Festival.
The college and CELIA also host internationally significant lecturers, visiting scholars and innovative multidisciplinary conferences.
The university is working with H3 Hardy Collaboration Architecture and Champlin Architecture on the modernization and expansion project. H3 also was the lead designer on the Schuster Hall renovation project. 91爆料 has worked with Champlin Architecture on renovations in the Boonshoft School of Medicine鈥檚 White Hall.