The Day

UConn opens satellite campus in Hartford

Students, faculty set to begin classes in capital on Monday

- By PAT EATON-ROBB

Hartford — Mayor Luke Bronin says he sees the University of Connecticu­t’s new downtown satellite campus as much more than an institutio­n of higher learning.

The buildings, which sit between the Front Street riverfront entertainm­ent district and the Wadsworth Atheneum art museum on Main Street, are a major piece in the ongoing effort to revitalize the city, he said.

“The campus is going to connect parts of Hartford that have been disconnect­ed for many years, and I think it’s a critical piece of the puzzle to making our city the vibrant, active downtown that we all want it to be,” said Bronin, a Democrat.

About 2,300 UConn students and 300 full-time faculty members are scheduled to begin classes on Monday in the state’s capital city, which has about 125,000 residents.

Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a Democrat, and University of Connecticu­t President Susan Herbst on Wednesday cut a ribbon to open the campus, which was relocated from West Hartford at a cost of about $140 million.

Much of that money was spent on a major renovation and five-story addition to the historic centerpiec­e building that once housed the Hartford Times newspaper.

The building has an exterior courtyard open to the public, and retail stores are planned at street level. A bookstore and coffee shop have already opened across the street.

Besides the 160,000-squarefoot anchor building, the campus includes a smaller building to house UConn’s School of Social Work and about 19,200 square feet in the Hartford Public Library in partnershi­p with that organizati­on.

UConn already uses a nearby building for its Graduate Business Learning Center.

Herbst called the campus a “living, breathing institutio­n at the core of this city.”

“It will be part of the backbone of Hartford: a place of learning, engagement and discovery and a vibrant part of this neighborho­od and the capital city as a whole,” she said.

Nearby restaurant­s, shops and other businesses are preparing to accept Husky Bucks, part of a university-wide debit card system.

The state also this month began a new hourly bus service linking Hartford with UConn’s main campus in Storrs.

Wednesday’s ribbon cutting also comes just months after the city opened a new 6,000-seat minor league baseball stadium nearby.

“We understand that when our cities thrive, our state will thrive again,” Malloy said.

“The campus is going to connect parts of Hartford that have been disconnect­ed for many years, and I think it’s a critical piece of the puzzle to making our city the vibrant, active downtown that we all want it to be.” HARTFORD MAYOR LUKE BRONIN

 ?? SARAH GORDON/THE DAY ?? Randall Bumgarner, with Oaks Stone Wall Constructi­on Company in Norwich, works on building a drystone retaining wall on Wednesday at a home on Briggs Street in New London.
SARAH GORDON/THE DAY Randall Bumgarner, with Oaks Stone Wall Constructi­on Company in Norwich, works on building a drystone retaining wall on Wednesday at a home on Briggs Street in New London.
 ?? PAT EATON-ROBB/AP PHOTO ?? University of Connecticu­t President Susan Herbst and Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy cut the ribbon on the school’s new downtown Hartford campus on Wednesday in Hartford. UConn students and faculty are scheduled to begin classes Monday in the capital...
PAT EATON-ROBB/AP PHOTO University of Connecticu­t President Susan Herbst and Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy cut the ribbon on the school’s new downtown Hartford campus on Wednesday in Hartford. UConn students and faculty are scheduled to begin classes Monday in the capital...
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