daily menu » rate the banner | guess the city | one on one

Go Back   SkyscraperCity > Continental Forums > North American Skyscrapers Forum > Metropolis & States > Tampa / St Petersburg > Skyway Lounge

Skyway Lounge Discussions about the Tampa Bay area community.... news, nightlife, attractions, sports, events, etc.


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old October 15th, 2007, 11:57 PM   #1
JBrisco
USF Architecture Student
 
JBrisco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Tampa, FLA
Posts: 1,525
Likes (Received): 0

The University of Tampa Is Expanding!

New, New, New!
Future plans for UT include new parking garage, chapel
Ellery McCardle
Issue date: 10/12/07 Section: News & Features

Media Credit: John Phifer

Though UT has recently undergone quite a bit of change with the addition of Kennedy Place and Stadium Center, along with the new eateries in the student union, even bigger changes are waiting in the wings.

New classrooms, a performing arts center, another parking garage and a chapel are some of the biggest changes that will be coming to campus. Additional planned changes to UT include an intramural field next to the softball field and a new recreation center where the current one stands. A newly-revised landscape plan was set for UT in 2014, but has since been pushed back to 2017.

Dan Gura, vice president for development and university relations, helped explain some of the upcoming changes within the next ten years on UT's campus.

"We've got a lot of work ahead of us, but it's exciting," Gura said.

New Chapel and Performing Arts Center Scheduled

The chapel's construction is projected to start in late 2008. Interestingly, the chapel will not be for a specified religious denomination.

"It will be a place for students and faculty to go for quiet time," Gura said. "[It will] be a very nice complement for a lot of the programs that deal with faith values and character development."

The chapel is set to be built on the corner where the nursing center ends, directly across from Brevard Hall.

The chapel's donors are currently in talks with an architect and Gura says they are very committed to this project.

However, the largest project will be the new performing arts center, which will be located next to John H. Sykes College of Business.

"We have such a strong performing arts group," Gura said. "It would be great if we could build that kind of arena and put a gallery in there." Additional classrooms in the new arts center will accommodate more space in the Bailey Arts Studio.

Office (and Classroom) Space

Classrooms are currently the highest priority in terms of campus necessities. A projected plan calls for two multi-level buildings, replacing the nursing center and communications classrooms and eliminating crowding among faculty offices and classrooms. The strip of lecture halls, nursing labs, communications classrooms and music rooms was constructed in the 1930s.

They initially served as housing for Florida State Fair workers and animals until the 1980s, when the event moved to the northern part of Tampa and UT turned the buildings into centers of learning.
The issue of space in the building has become so dire that offices are currently being leased for nursing professors in a building adjacent to Kennedy Place.

For new classrooms, 70 to 75 percent of the funding must come from a private donation, while in contrast, residence halls and parking garages are bought through bond revenues.

Room and board costs directly cover other dorm expenses. Tuition costs cannot be used to fund classrooms because the money is spent on running the university.

Unfortunately, because of the often staggering cost of new classrooms, donations for such facilities are hard to come by.

No money has been received for the two planned classroom buildings, but Gura and his team have prospective donors in mind.

"This probably won't happen as quickly as we would like, but these two buildings have to happen," Gura stressed.

Although some parking will be created from the surrounding areas of the nursing center and communications classrooms, UT is not concentrating on adding more parking besides the new ramp in place of the current ROTC building.

Dorm Dilemma

Unlike previous years, UT has not had to place students in hotels this year.

Stadium Center, a $45 million project, was completed this summer to accommodate students wishing to live on campus and help eliminate hotel residences.

The dorm has been received positively by students.

"I think it's amazing!" said freshman Samantha Cook. "I live in a double and we have a private bathroom!!"

Jamie Wasley agreed, "I love Stadium ... everything is so clean, nice and really well furnished. I also love that it is so convenient to buy food downstairs."

However, it is projected that by 2009, students may once again have to start living in a hotel. In order to receive approval from bond holders to build a new dorm, proof of demand to live on campus must be presented, meaning UT must show that students who are living in the hotel would rather move on campus.
What does this mean for students? Probably at least one year in a hotel for some. It took just over two years to get Stadium Center approved for construction.

On the bright side, UT has significantly expanded its borders within the last ten years, especially with residence halls.

During the last decade, six new residence halls have been built: Austin in 1998, Brevard in 2000, Vaughn in 2001, Straz in 2003, Kennedy in 2006 and Stadium Center in 2007.

This rampant growth has created some debt for UT, so in response, UT has decided to slow its growth rate.

Selling UT

"Students and faculty sell [UT]. All we do is present opportunities," Gura explained. In order to better help students and faculty sell UT, Gura's team is planning to create a visual display showing UT's landscape ten years ago and today to further excite alumni into donating.

But Gura feels the importance of donations go beyond a name on a building or a classroom.

"Our job at UT is to help change students' lives, to provide opportunities you didn't dream about before coming here," he said. "But to help change lives, we need to raise money for scholarships and buildings."

Naming a dorm hall on behalf of a donor is a project within itself. Each dorm has different costs. Therefore, the donation amount needed to place someone's name on a residence hall varies, and is decided based on the market value.

Kennedy Place, which cost $22.5 million to construct, will add the name of a donor on it for $3 million, a price which a donor is currently close to matching. In contrast, Stadium Center, which cost $45 million, has a minimum donation requirement of $8 million to be considered as the building's new namesake.

Those who donate money to UT are mostly current or past Board of Trustees members. Gura and his team seek donations through writing to alumni, hosting events, publishing the UT Journal three times each year and making contact with those who have expressed an interest in donating. These and other promotions are meant to stimulate excitement about the campus, as donations rarely come spontaneously.
JBrisco no está en línea   Reply With Quote

Sponsored Links
 
Old October 16th, 2007, 08:20 PM   #2
koopalicious
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Tampa
Posts: 409
Likes (Received): 4

Where is there room for an intramural field next to the softball field?
koopalicious no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old October 16th, 2007, 08:24 PM   #3
JBrisco
USF Architecture Student
 
JBrisco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Tampa, FLA
Posts: 1,525
Likes (Received): 0

There are two possibilities, that I see they might take. Behind the Cass Building, and on the parking lot behind the Softball field.
U.T. is also in the talks of buying all of the property to NewPort Ave, and they might own the property on Fielding and Brevard on Kennedy.
And I just noticed on google earth there is another full sized baseball field on North B Street and Delaware/Gilchrest. There appears to be room there.
JBrisco no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old October 16th, 2007, 08:54 PM   #4
koopalicious
Registered User
 
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Tampa
Posts: 409
Likes (Received): 4


I think that's the softball field the article is referring to. I haven't looked at a map/satellite, but if you're talking about the field next to the tracks, then that's it. I just don't see how there is room to keep that and add a intramural field...

A regular-sized soccer/football field would need a space at least the size of the lot you mentioned between Fielding and Brevard.
koopalicious no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old October 17th, 2007, 12:56 AM   #5
JBrisco
USF Architecture Student
 
JBrisco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Tampa, FLA
Posts: 1,525
Likes (Received): 0

I don't know man! lol
JBrisco no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old January 25th, 2008, 05:41 PM   #6
JBrisco
USF Architecture Student
 
JBrisco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Tampa, FLA
Posts: 1,525
Likes (Received): 0

UT Alumnus Donates $3 Million; Residence Hall Renamed in His Honor
Published: January 25, 2008
Frank P. Urso M.D.
Frank P. Urso, M.D., '57
Frank P. Urso M.D., an Ybor City native, University of Tampa graduate of the class of 1957 and retired pathologist, has given The University of Tampa a $3 million gift.

As a result, the University will honor Urso by renaming the Kennedy Place residence hall on campus — which opened in August 2006 — the Frank P. Urso, M.D. Hall.

“UT changed my life,” Urso said of his gift.

Urso described UT in the 1950s as a “workingman’s college,” and excelled in the sciences. After graduation he continued with medical school at the University of Miami, where he graduated with honors. Urso served as the director of pathology and clinical laboratories at three major hospitals, and worked as professor of pathology at Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine — where he was twice honored as “Lecturer of the Year.”

Since retiring, Urso has delved into writing. In 2005, Urso published a memoir, “A Stranger In The Barrio: Memoir of a Tampa Sicilian” (iUniverse, 2005). Leland Hawes of the Tampa Tribune described the memoir as “earthy and emotional,” with “never a dull word.” Each resident of the 182-bed residence hall will receive a copy of Urso’s book.

“We are grateful to Dr. Urso for his generous donation,” said UT President Ronald L. Vaughn. “Frank’s transformative experience at UT represents everything that’s special about a University of Tampa education.”

Urso Hall is located on Kennedy Blvd. across from Plant Hall. It is 11 stories high and houses 182 students in 122 single apartments and 30 double units. The residence hall is especially popular among upperclassmen and graduate students.

A dedication ceremony will be held on Feb. 22 in the lobby at Frank P. Urso, M.D. Hall.
JBrisco no está en línea   Reply With Quote
Old January 27th, 2008, 12:15 AM   #7
JBrisco
USF Architecture Student
 
JBrisco's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Tampa, FLA
Posts: 1,525
Likes (Received): 0

Presidential Candidate John McCain Visits UT
Published: January 25, 2008
Senator and presidential candidate John McCain made a visit Friday to The University of Tampa to participate in a televised discussion focusing on national security.

Several nationally known political figures attended the roundtable event, including former Homeland Security Director Tom Ridge, Minnesota Governor Tim Pawlenty and South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham.

A crowd of McCain supporters, members of the media as well as University staff and students packed Plant Hall’s Music Room to watch the discussion, which centered on the threat terrorism poses to the nation.

“I still believe the transcendent challenge of the 21st century is radical Islamic terrorism,” McCain said. “It is a challenge that has taken many fronts. And the central battlefield is in Iraq.”

The panel members, who also included Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee and Hillsborough County Commissioner Mark Sharpe, were unanimous in their support of McCain as the presidential candidate who can best maintain national security and strengthen the nation’s military.

“They say that people will judge you by the company you keep,” McCain said. “I’m honored to be in the company of these people.”

Student Government Vice President Tom McKissock, who was among the event’s spectators, said that a visit from any presidential candidate is an experience that benefits students and the University community as a whole.

“It’s good to see the issues from a broad perspective and it’s good to see how decisions are made,” McKissock said. “Even if you disagree with a particular candidate, it’s still good to hear their positions.”

McCain is making frequent visits throughout Florida this week in preparation for Tuesday’s Republican presidential primary.
JBrisco no está en línea   Reply With Quote


Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT +2. The time now is 04:59 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Feedback Buttons provided by Advanced Post Thanks / Like v3.1.2 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2013 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.
vBulletin Optimisation provided by vB Optimise (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2013 DragonByte Technologies Ltd. (Resources saved on this page: MySQL 25.00%)

SkyscraperCity - In Urbanity We Trust

Hosted by Blacksun, dedicated to this site too!
Forum server management by DaiTengu