The university welcomes the fall
semester with a series of developments, including the newly named
south campus, renovation of the commons, completion of the Performing
Arts Center, construction of a new parking structure and a new Fullerton
Arboretum Center, and groundbreaking for the new Mihaylo Hall.
August 18, 2005
Cal State Fullerton welcomes the fall semester
with a new name for its south county branch campus, more than 60
new tenure-track faculty members and projected first-day student
enrollment of 32,500 students, including more than 3,000 who will
attend classes offered at the CSUF
Irvine Campus.
Old and new campus members will find new pathways
and detours as construction and renovation projects continue throughout
the campus.
Among those new projects that are changing the face
of the campus is the renovation
of the commons — the area between the Pollak Library,
Performing Arts Building, Titan Student Union and Titan Bookstore.
New, wider walkways lined with trees have been installed, while
lighting and additional landscaping will continue through the semester.
Finishing touches are in the works for the new Performing
Arts Center, as are sidewalks, roadway and landscaping between
the new structure and the Visual Arts Center. Those wishing to park
in Parking Lot C at the corner of State College Boulevard and Nutwood
Avenue will be out of luck: the lot is closed for construction use
as part of the Performing Arts Center project.
Once again open to campus members, however, is the
walkway that runs from the Nutwood Parking Structure between the
biological science greenhouse and the Performing Arts Center to
the Quad.
Construction continues on the 10,000-square-foot
Fullerton
Arboretum visitor and conference center. The project, which
includes classrooms, a museum, an open-air meeting area and entrance
plaza, is scheduled for completion later this year.
Also under construction is the State
College Parking Structure located in Lot B on the west side
of the Kinesiology and Health Science Building. When completed —
sometime in late spring — the six-level structure will provide
more than 1,500 parking spaces.
Less visible than the construction of a building
or renovation of a large open area is the university’s fire-life-safety
project. The project, which includes additional fire hydrants and
upgrades of the campus fire alarm system, continues in various locations.
In November, construction will begin on a realignment
of the south side entrance to campus in preparation for the construction
of the College of Business and Economics building, Stephen
G. Mihaylo Hall. Schematic plans for the Hall, as well as the
student Recreation Center, were approved by the CSU Board of Trustees
in July.
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