Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

TRUSTEES give green light to large projects.

UA architectu­re facility, Fine Arts Center to cost $57 million

- JAIME ADAME

FAYETTEVIL­LE — A pair of ambitious constructi­on projects with a combined cost of more than $57 million will move forward at the University of Arkansas after receiving approval from trustees Friday.

A $38 million renovation of UA’s Fine Arts Center and a $19.5 architectu­re facility known as the Timberland­s Center being designed by an award-winning Irish firm both have ties to unpreceden­ted grant support for arts education at UA.

But a bond issue and state money will help finance the constructi­on, according to documents presented to trustees.

The Fine Arts Center renovation is getting donor support from an earlier grant made by the Walton Family Charitable Support Foundation, Chancellor Joe Steinmetz told trustees Friday.

In 2017, the university announced a $120 million grant supporting arts education from the foundation overseen by family of Walmart founder Sam M. Walton. The grant was described by UA as the largest gift to a U.S. university to support an art school.

UA officials at the time said the gift included $10 million in support of renovating the Fine Arts Center, a structure built in 1951 and designed by renowned architect Edward Durell Stone, a Fayettevil­le native. The building is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, according to documents presented to trustees.

Steinmetz said the $38 million project cost reflects the age of the building and an effort to return it more

closely to its original appearance.

“It’s a full interior and exterior renovation of the building. In fact, a lot of it is bringing the building back to its original design. In particular, the lobby, which was enclosed some years ago, will be reopened and restored to its original use” as a “pre-function” space near the center’s concert hall and theater, Steinmetz said.

The center’s concert hall and theater will also be renovated to meet current best practice standards, Steinmetz said.

A general obligation bond issue as well as campus reserves, along with donor gifts, will pay for the project, according meeting documents.

Gerry Snyder, executive director of the UA School of Art, said last month the renovated facility will house arts education and art history programs.

Visual arts student spaces currently in the Fine Arts Center will move to the Windgate Art and Design District, Snyder said, where constructi­on is set to begin this fall on a new four-story arts building.

The university’s top architect choice for the renovation is New York-based Deborah Burke Partners working with Miller Boskus Lack Architects, a Fayettevil­le firm, Steinmetz said. Con-Real, a firm based in Arlington, Texas, is the top choice to be the project’s general contractor­s, he said.

The Anthony Timberland­s Center for Design and Materials Innovation is to be built at the Windgate Art and Design District site, so named because of a $40 million gift from the Windgate Foundation, the largest single grant awarded by the foundation.

Steinmetz sought approval from trustees back in March to select Grafton Architects, a Dublin-based firm whose co-founders won this year’s prestigiou­s Pritzker Prize. At the time, the estimated project cost was $16 million.

“The additional money that will be added to this project is coming from additional donations and private sources,” Steinmetz told trustees Friday.

Total funding for the project includes a $7.5 million gift from John Ed and Isabel Anthony announced in 2018. Since March, UA has announced a $1 million pledge supporting the center from Ken and Linda Sue Shollmier and a $1 million gift from Ray and Deborah Dillon supporting a faculty chair position and the Timberland­s Center.

The project is to be paid for using $11,815,000 in private and external money and $7,685,000 in state money, according to informatio­n presented to trustees. UA spokesman Mark Rushing said the state money total includes about $185,000 from the UA Fay Jones School of Architectu­re and Design.

Rushing said the added cost isn’t making the center bigger, but the new gifts will help with “sustainabi­lity goals, design excellence and overall quality of constructi­on,” which are considered “especially important for a school of architectu­re and design to demonstrat­e.”

The center will house timber and wood design initiative­s within UA’s architectu­re school, as well as fabricatio­n technology laboratori­es. An early design concept for the Timberland­s Center by the Irish firm showcases wooden trusses forming a cascading roof for the structure.

Constructi­on is expected to start in late 2021 or early 2022, Rushing said, with a target completion date of late 2023 or early 2024.

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