Central Connecticut State University

 
 

CCSU construction is sign of the future
 

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By WILLIAM F. MILLERICK, Special to The Herald

November 15, 2002

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NEW BRITAIN -- Do yourself a favor and take an hour or two some Sunday, drive over to CCSU and prepare to be amazed. The old campus at Central Connecticut State University, as we have known it for so many years, is being transformed. In nearly every direction one looks, there is new construction, either complete or in process. Central is as much a carefully managed construction site and a university these days and what that means for the future of the institution, the city and region is immense.

Somehow, this sprawling project has been flying under the radar, while all of the attention has been going to the transformation under way at UConn. Certainly, the massive amounts of state dollars going into UConn are visible and obvious, but Central, proportionally speaking, is holding its own.

The new student center, which is replacing the old one, is substantially complete and besides being a contemporary technological marvel, also makes an architectural statement with its copper-clad exterior.

Nearby, yet another new parking garage is going up and no one -- not a single person -- will ever argue against more parking as CCSU continues to grow.

The Vance Academic Center is a wonderful new building, both in its everyday use and its architecture. It’s hard to say which, if any, is a cornerstone project of this wave of construction but the "Big Dig," CCSU style, might qualify.

On campus, they call it the "Big Dig" colloquially, because when you stand atop Stanley Street and look down at what years ago used to be Wells Street cutting the campus in half, all you see is a scene right out of downtown Boston. More than 2,000 feet of concrete boxes, big enough to walk in, are being laid, one after another, nearly the length of what was once, years ago, the landmark old Wells Street. It is a pretty amazing site.

Eventually, the bulk of the university’s energy needs, gas, steam, electricity, sewer, telecommunications, will run through this tunnel and branch off into the buildings. Look at it today and you see concrete, dirt and wire. But in a year, it will be gone below ground, as invisible as your central nervous system but serving much the same purpose.

But it gets better. This energy tunnel is so big it can only go partially underground. For much of its route, the builders actually have to raise the level of the ground. When complete, a segment of what used to be Wells Street will be 20 feet higher.

It will add to the startling campus transformation. While all of this is going on, there are projects of lesser scale in nearly every direction.There is so much opening and closing of floors and entrances and whole buildings that the university has a daily construction update posted. There is even a live Web cam trained on the project.

The athletic facilities haven’t been left behind, with a new football stadium and new lighting. Seating at Detrick gymnasium has been substantially improved for fans of basketball. New outdoor sports facilities will be added along Barbour Road.

Meanwhile, full-scale renovations are under way to dormitories like Sheridan Hall. While much of the work is visible and will be visible for years to come, much of it is not visible, but is intended to beef up the crucial infrastructure that allows the campus to operate and grow. One is no less important than the other.

The utilitarian look of the Central campus is being transformed. It looks a lot more like a university than an institution today. The wave of construction that is rolling across CCSU says a lot about the vision, the pride and the determination of the school’s leadership. It also says a lot about willingness of the Connecticut State University system to recognize what a powerful and important force for economic progress CCSU is in the region.

The people educated there remain in the area, for the most part. They operate or work at businesses, raise families, buy homes and become leaders. The investment in a 2,000-foot energy tunnel may look like a lot of concrete and dirt, but it is an important investment in the future of the region. And it says a lot about Connecticut, the governor and the legislature, that so much construction is under way at Central, at UConn, at Tunxis and other schools. Clearly, this state believes in public education. Anyone with two eyes can see that. See it for yourself someday soon. And be amazed at a campuswide transformation.


William F. Millerick is president of the New Britain Chamber of Commerce. He may be reached at bill@newbritainchamber .com.)

 

Reprinted by permission ©The Herald 2002

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