Skip to main content

UALR Building Projects Set to Get Under Way

Members of UALR’s Board of Visitors got a glimpse of the future at their last board meeting of the academic year Thursday – architectural renderings of four new buildings.

nanoscience
Center for Integrative Bio Nanotechnology Science

Robert Adams, vice chancellor of finance and administration, displayed for the board artist sketches of several buildings. Construction on the first two projects will start this summer.

“These exciting campus developments are made possible by two bond issues totaling $62 million recommended by the UALR Board of Visitors and approved last fall by the University of Arkansas Board of Trustees,” Adams said.

housing
Honors Housing

The first two projects will be an addition to student housing and a nanotechnology research center, followed by a student services one-stop center, an outdoor track and field complex, and then the renovation of a building to provide space for the growing programs in nursing and health sciences.

onestop
One Stop Student Services Center

A new one-stop center where students can enroll, register, establish financial aid, pay tuition, and other tasks before they start classes will be located just north of the Donaghey Student Center, with a pedestrian walkway from the upper level of Donaghey to the new building.

Once the new building is ready, Administration South will be vacated and work will begin to convert that building into a center for nursing and health sciences.

Adams said the first building to break ground likely will be the honors residence hall, scheduled to be ready for students to move in prior to the start of classes in fall 2011. It will be the fourth residence hall at UALR and designed to be a part of the residence village bordering on Fair Park Avenue. The new building will provide housing for approximately 370.

sportscomplex
Sports Complex

A fifth project, an athletic complex for track and field competition intramural softball, and soccer, will be located on is the south side of Asher Avenue on the site of the former Coleman Dairy.