IU business school expansion honors aesthetic


Save Story
Leer en español

Estimated read time: 2-3 minutes

This archived news story is available only for your personal, non-commercial use. Information in the story may be outdated or superseded by additional information. Reading or replaying the story in its archived form does not constitute a republication of the story.

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — The doors where undergraduates once entered the Kelley School of Business are gone.

In their place is now where hallways meet and open to a three-level common area. It's one aspect of the $32.5 million expansion project that adds space for the growing needs of the business school, but keeps to the aesthetic of the Indiana University campus. And it's nearly complete.

"It's all finishing touches," Teresa Kase, Kelley's assistant dean for finance and operations, told The Herald-Times (http://bit.ly/1kPmWu1 ).

The expansion will be complete at the beginning of August, she said. Fee Lane, which was one-way traffic since the expansion construction started, reopened to two-way traffic last week. The only major thing remaining is the landscaping, Kase said.

Started in May 2012, the 90,000-square-foot expansion on four stories adds classrooms, meeting spaces and career training offices to the undergraduate business building in an L-shape along 10th Street and Fee Lane, moving the main entrance to face Fee.

Renovations of the existing building, built in the mid-1960s, are just beginning. Work started this May and will be done in phases until fall of 2016, Kase said. The total cost of the renovation and expansion is $60 million, and although costs are covered, Kase said there are still donor naming opportunities throughout the building.

The increase in space — more than 1,000 seats among 16 classrooms — will allow for at least 100 more students per academic year, bumping the undergraduate program up to about 5,000 students, plus the students who have business minors, Kase said.

The expansion has a fourth-floor outdoor patio and a Kelley apparel store on the main floor as well as a stock trading room and a sales laboratory where students can make sales pitches and be recorded for critiques, Kase said.

She said students can reserve classrooms not in use to study together, and there are now various open spaces along the hallway to work.

"Students have a gathering space and don't have to sit on the hallway floor," she said. "We had a shortage of space in our old building for students to work on projects."

Student groups and faculty will also be able to use a new multipurpose room and executive meeting room, and there will be a new space for prospective students and their parents to learn about the school, Kase said. She said the wooden floor in that room is from the trees that were cut down for the expansion, and seedlings were also saved from those trees to be transplanted to other areas of campus.

Allen Headley, facilities director for Kelley, said the expansion's wooden details and other design aspects are modeled after Woodburn Hall to fit with the current campus.

"The goal is to make the building look like it's been here for 100 years," he said.

___

Information from: The Herald Times, http://www.heraldtimesonline.com

This is an AP Member Exchange shared by The Herald-Times.

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Most recent U.S. stories

Related topics

U.S.
MJ SLABY-Times

    STAY IN THE KNOW

    Get informative articles and interesting stories delivered to your inbox weekly. Subscribe to the KSL.com Trending 5.
    By subscribing, you acknowledge and agree to KSL.com's Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    KSL Weather Forecast