Daily
Gazette article
Tuesday, January 5,
2010
http://www.dailygazette.com/
By
Michael Goot
Union set to unveil new graduate
center

The Union Graduate College
located on Nott Terrace at Liberty
Street in Schenectady.
SCHENECTADY � Union Graduate
College is taking the
next step in its growth with the opening of its new building at the corner of
Nott Terrace and Liberty Street.
Classes
are starting this week in the 24,000-square-foot facility, which will be
officially dedicated in a ceremony set for Jan. 13 at 10 a.m. The public is
invited.
President
Laura Schweitzer said college officials are excited about moving from a
10,000-square-foot space at the Union
College campus.
�We
have faculty scattered all over campus and we�re now all in this building,� she
said.
A
lot of care went into the design of the building, Schweitzer said, to make it
welcoming for students. The first floor features a large open atrium containing
comfortable seating, a kitchenette and a big-screen television.
�It
gives them a place to come. It feels like home,� she said.
In
addition, there is an office for student support services, which had been
previously scattered at different locations at the college�s old home. There is
also a new Career
Services Center
courtesy of a $500,000 donation from Lewis and Colleen Golub.
The
building also has several green features including sustainable building
materials, high-efficiency lighting, a geothermal heating and cooling system
and a swale system to redirect storm water runoff. The roof is also designed to
house solar panels, which will be used in the school�s emerging energy systems
engineering degree, according to the college.
Schweitzer
added that there are even solar deflectors on the windows that help direct
light into the building but also help deflect the light and heat when the sun
is high in the summer. College officials are pursuing Leadership in
Environmental and Energy Design as a green building.
�We
obviously want to be environmentally conscious in making our choices here, and
so we have taken a lot that was an old Sunoco gas station that had been closed
down and transformed it into our new campus,� she said.
continued
Daily Gazette article
(1/5/10) � page 2
Schweitzer
said this new space will allow the college to grow its programs. There are
currently 650 full- and part-time students in four different schools �
engineering, management, bioethics and school of education. There was a 5.5
percent increase in total enrollment this year.
�We
would like to double in size,� Schweitzer said.
The
engineering school has a new program in sustainable energy systems. The
management school has launched a new program that allows students to get their
MBA while fulfilling their required 150 hours of accounting.
The
college also offers a master�s of arts in teaching of Chinese and is the only
upstate school with this program, according to Schweitzer.
The
bioethics program has a new concentration in research ethics, which is
attracting lawyers and other professionals.
The
$8.5 million building was financed with bonds and $3 million in fund-raising.
The college received a variety of federal and state grants it will use to help
pay back the bond, including member items from U.S. Rep. Paul Tonko, Sen. Hugh Farley, NYSERDA and Metroplex.
***