Chicago Sun-Times

BIG PLAN ON CAMPUS

UIC unveils ambitious plans to transform the school and its surroundin­g community with new buildings, updated quad and renovated L station

- BY RACHEL HINTON, STAFF REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Over a dozen new buildings. A new “livinglear­ning” center for freshmen. A renovated L stop. An entertainm­ent district. A new soccer stadium. An ice skating rink and fire pit in an updated central quad.

Those are just some of the plans officials at the University of Illinois at Chicago have laid out as part of a master plan that seeks to dramatical­ly transform the Near West Side campus — and the neighborho­od around it.

The plan, which covers nearly every corner of its 311-acre campus, will bring changes to both its undergradu­ate and health sciences buildings. It comes as the university seeks to push enrollment from 32,000 to 35,000.

Chancellor Michael Amiridis said he views the 10-year plan in five-year chunks. Nine new buildings are planned for the first phase, which he estimates will cost about $1 billion alone.

In phase two, the plan lays out another “five or six” buildings, Amiridis said, though it was too early to give an exact price tag because there are so many variables.

Funding for that first set of buildings and renovation­s will come from four sources: around 30 percent from public-private partnershi­ps, 25 percent from bonds, another 25 percent from state financing and 20 percent from philanthro­py.

It adds up to implementi­ng a vision the school has been finalizing for the past two years.

“It’s not an issue of what I want, or what UIC wants — the question is, what does the institutio­n need?” Amiridis said. “For a number of years infrastruc­ture here hasn’t been a priority — we made it a priority through this process because it’s clear that we cannot achieve our strategic goals as an institutio­n if we do not have the right infrastruc­ture.”

Amiridis, who became chancellor in 2015, said if everything goes as expected, the university would begin breaking ground on four of the new projects within the next 18 months.

There’s barely an inch of the campus that will go untouched. The Richard J. Daley library will be expanded, the promenade extended and greenery will be added to the central quad, now filled with beige-gray concrete poles and covered in brick walkways.

The West Campus, home to the school’s medical hub, would see new surgery and cancer centers as well as a renovation of the Polk stop on the CTA’s Pink Line to bring the station’s design more in line with the design of the campus that surrounds it.

The East Campus site will see the most changes. The Central Quad would get “inviting outdoor furnishing­s that encourage people to stop and enjoy exterior spaces.” They’ll “extend outdoor activity across the seasons with the addition of outdoor fire pits, ice skating rinks and seasonal color.” Moveable seating will be added so classes can meet outdoors.

Amiridis said making sure the plan had full community support — from both the university and the neighborho­od — took time.

“We wanted to make sure that this was a comprehens­ive plan, not just a list of projects, and what is important there is … what we do with our spaces … to make the campus more green, to make the campus more accessible, to make it more friendly and to make

it a place where students want to hang out,” Amiridis said.

On the other hand, the goal of connecting students to the city, while still increasing green space, “may at times contradict the environmen­t we’re in,” Amiridis said. “We are restricted by the surroundin­g environmen­t as well, and that’s why we had to have some external help.”

UIC brought in Chicago-based firm Moody Nolan Chicago and national firm Ayers Saint Gross to help create the plan — the latter specialize­s in university master plans.

Freshman Lila Aryadwita said she’s “glad to hear” the school is making changes because the buildings are pretty old.

Even though she likely won’t be on campus when the renovation­s and new buildings are finished, freshman Angela Sianturi said she likes what she’s heard.

“At the end of the day it’s fine [that I won’t see these changes] because you can’t expect for all of it to finish that quickly,” Sianturi said. “When I’m older and I come back, it’ll be nice to look and see the different changes, so I’m excited for that.”

Monica Uribe, a senior, said the school is pushing itself forward to appeal to newer students.

“I think UIC is doing a pretty good job of changing things in order for new students to come in,” Uribe said. “I think they’re adjusting to the students that are coming in and keeping in mind the diverse students who are coming in.”

Amiridis said the master plan is also about building pride and making a good first impression on potential students. Having an environmen­t like this he believes will help build pride and enhance the identity of the school, which is something the school has struggled with over the course of its 50 years, Amiridis said.

The new facilities also will give the campus enough space to accommodat­e a growing student population. At 32,000 students right now, the goal is to reach 35,000 and Amiridis believes that, with the transforma­tion plan, they can reach that goal and surpass it.

“When Mayor [Richard J.] Daley cut the ribbon in February of 1965, he said that this university would reach its full potential at some point and it will be, at that point, 32,000 students,” Amiridis said.

“We are [at] 32,000 students right now, and we have reached that potential with infrastruc­ture that was establishe­d in 1965 with a number of additions but not major changes,” he said. “Now that we’ve reached this goal it’s time to look at the next 50 years — what does the university need, how is this university going to progress even further? And that’s what this plan is doing. It’s looking at the transforma­tion of the university for the next 50 years.”

 ?? SUPPLIED RENDERING ??
SUPPLIED RENDERING
 ?? SUPPLIED RENDERINGS ?? UIC officials want their revised campus to be more inviting to students, making it more of a place they will want to hang out.
SUPPLIED RENDERINGS UIC officials want their revised campus to be more inviting to students, making it more of a place they will want to hang out.
 ?? SUPPLIED RENDERINGS ?? TOP: The UIC master plan calls for adding greenery to the main quad area, in addition to outdoor furnishing­s. ABOVE: In the winter, the main quad would be home to an ice skating rink.
SUPPLIED RENDERINGS TOP: The UIC master plan calls for adding greenery to the main quad area, in addition to outdoor furnishing­s. ABOVE: In the winter, the main quad would be home to an ice skating rink.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States