The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

$125M capital campaign ends with more than $175M raised

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Launched in January 2018 with a vision to raise competitiv­eness across the athletic department, Georgia Tech’s $125 million capital campaign was completed with more than $175 million raised.

In total, Tech donors exceeded the goal by a hair more than 40%. The athletic department made the announceme­nt of the project’s completion Thursday.

The centerpiec­e of athletic director Todd Stansbury’s fundraisin­g campaign, dubbed Athletics Initiative 2020, is a renovation of the Edge Center, which has housed the main offices for the athletics department since 1982. The project had a $70 million price tag, but nearly $85 million has been raised for the new building, envisioned as a six-story space that will sit on the footprint of the Edge Center at the northeast corner of Bobby Dodd Stadium.

The building is nearing the end of the design phase. Constructi­on, which can commence once the design is complete, is expected to take between 12 to 18 months. It’s been Stansbury’s belief that the state-of-the-art building, planned to be filled with natural light with a view of the stadium, can be a front porch and a branding element for the athletic department. The Edge Center remains functional but is showing its age.

Moreover, the building will house services for athletes, including academic, wellness and performanc­e support, and also programmin­g to prepare them for profession­al careers.

“We had to do some things so we could recruit and build a better student-athlete, which ultimately leads to wins,” Stansbury said on a recent recording of his podcast.

The AI2020 project was threeprong­ed, with the developmen­t office seeking gifts for facilities, endowments and current operations. Facilities ($88 million goal) and endowments ($25 million goal) comprised the bulk of the campaign, and those two buckets have been filled with a little more than $140 million in gifts and commitment­s. Likewise, the goal for operations ($12 million) was far exceeded, at $37.4 million, as Tech has faced severe budget issues because of the revenue shortage caused by COVID-19.

Completed projects include the football locker room, the women’s basketball locker room and a renovation of Russ Chandler Stadium. Tech also was able to complete its first endowments of head-coaching positions, for men’s and women’s tennis and swimming and diving.

Fortunatel­y for Tech, most of the financial commitment­s and legwork for fundraisin­g had been completed by the time COVID-19 made faceto-face meetings unfeasible. Stansbury credited the Alexander-tharpe Fund, Tech’s developmen­t office for athletics, for laying the foundation for the project’s success well before the pandemic.

“We were very, very fortunate that our donors came through and put us in this position, where we were able to provide facilities for student-athletes and coaches,” Stansbury said on his podcast.

Next projects include a $2 million team suite for the track and field/ cross country teams and the scholarshi­p fund.

 ?? GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS ?? An artist’s rendering of the renovated Edge Center, the headquarte­rs of Georgia Tech’s athletic department. The renovation of the building was the centerpiec­e of the athletic department’s $125 million capital campaign, which ended in December with $175 million raised.
GEORGIA TECH ATHLETICS An artist’s rendering of the renovated Edge Center, the headquarte­rs of Georgia Tech’s athletic department. The renovation of the building was the centerpiec­e of the athletic department’s $125 million capital campaign, which ended in December with $175 million raised.

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