Liberty plans engineering school campus
Submitted illustration
Liberty officials will present plans to the Campbell County Board of Supervisors for a new engineering school campus that would accommodate 2,000 students, a small research park and new degree programs.
Liberty University has plans to build an engineering campus that eventually would accommodate 2,000 students, a small research park and new degree programs for its School of Engineering and Computational Sciences.
The project is slated for Liberty-owned land just across the city line in Campbell County between the dorms on Campus East and U.S. 29, said Ron Sones, dean of the engineering school. The land had been under contract to a shopping center developer, AIG Baker, but plans fell through when the economy took a nosedive, said Chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr.
“I really think that a research park and a school of engineering will benefit the community more than another shopping center would,” Falwell said. On Monday, Liberty officials will present plans to the Campbell County Board of Supervisors, who must approve the school’s request to rezone the land, now designated for retail.
The nation’s high demand for engineering jobs and a strong local engineering community are two factors that prompted the project, Falwell said. The expansion also aligns with Liberty’s ongoing mission to grow beyond its roots as a small Christian liberal arts school.
The facility would provide a boost to Liberty’s fledgling engineering school, which was launched two years ago and enrolls about 450 students.
Phase one of the project is an 8,000-square-foot building dedicated to welding engineering — a new undergraduate major that will be offered next fall. Construction will begin early next year, Sones said.
The second phase includes a larger building that will hold the rest of the engineering school and a small research park. When the building is complete, Liberty plans to launch undergraduate programs in mechanical engineering and aerospace engineering, as well as graduate programs, Sones said.
About $1 million has been allotted from Liberty’s budget for initial construction costs. The school is seeking an additional $500,000 in grants and donations for equipment.
Engineering is a top request among prospective students, Falwell said.
Currently, Liberty offers undergraduate degrees in four engineering disciplines: electrical, computer, software and industrial.
Liberty student Ben Slaughter will be part of the first class of students to graduate from the engineering school in the spring of 2011. Slaughter, a software engineering major, transferred to Liberty last fall.
“The combination of an engineering school being at a Christian school was very inviting to me,” he said.
Between classes and his job as a lab assistant, Slaughter said he spends upwards of 10 hours a day at the engineering school, which is housed on the third floor of DeMossHall, Liberty’s main academic building. He looks forward to the engineering campus, especially the upgraded research facilities.
“I think it’s awesome. It’ll give us a lot more room to go and test our theories,” Slaughter said.
Jud Simmons, spokesman for Babcock & Wilcox, said that Liberty has the potential to train more engineers with roots in the city and spur growth within the local engineering community.
“It will be attractive to other business who want to move here,” he said.
Keith Mascher, co-owner of AMTI, a small engineering firm based in Lynchburg, is one of several local business leaders on the engineering school’s board of advisers. He cites the potential for research collaborations between Liberty and local industry as a plus.
“It will help expand the local businesses in this area that are doing engineering work and product development, without a doubt,” he said.
Reader Reactions
That’s it, Cosmo, play the “gay card” to make yourself out to be the victim. PATHETIC! You are nothing but a Democratic hack and that is all you have ever been! The Lynchburg MSA is prospering in spite of your negative influence. The counties around Lynchburg (especially Bedford) have grown faster than most counties in the state and even the City of Lynchburg’s population has increased in recent years thanks to the growth of LU. (Lynchburg counts LU’s students in its population numbers in order to obtain public assistance but tries to deny the same students the right to vote.) Mel, your attempt to impose your worldview on Lynchburg and Liberty University has failed. Go home.
I’d expect a rationalist like Cosmo to at least get the facts right. Lynchburg had done very well in job growth actually leading Central Va.
http://www.lynchburgchamber.org/lynchburglife/02-ecodevelopment.html
Is that it? I wanted to give you characters all the time you needed.
You are correct about one thing. Lynchburg is doing just fine. It is I believe the slowest growing area of Virginia and that’s what I want. Keep up the good work.
Oh, and the homophobia is wonderful. I do think it would be useful if you included a few more references to “what God wants”... that scares the daylights out of people.
Your silence speaks volumes, 24th.
24th, should we start calling you “Mel”?
Mel White, the Democrat and gay activist, also moved here for the same reason. Could it be that Cosmothe24th has revealed his true identity?
Cosmothe24th, why not pray to Big Bang? You have put your faith in BB whether you care to admit it or not. From what I can see, Lynchburg appears to be doing quite well thanks in large part to all those Christians that religious bigots like you love to hate. If only your kind were as tolerant as they are, this would be an even greater community.
Reality Check… Thank You. You restore my faith that taxes and growth in the Lynchburg area will remain low throughout my lifetime.
I don’t “pray” RC and I don’t hear voices in my head or have conversations or “personal relationships” with mythological characters.
But, I do give thanks! Mostly for people like you. You may not know it, but people like you are responsible for people like me moving here. Keep up the good work!
Oh yeah and Cosmothe24th, In the beginning, Big Bang created the heavens and the earth. Guess you have a personal relationship with Big Bang, right? Your faith exceeds that of any conservative Christian. It really does.
Cosmothe24th needs to rejoin us here on earth. Then, we might be able to make sense of his comments. Cosmo, when you pray to Charles Darwin, does he speak to you audibly? Your faith in Darwin and his disciple, Dawkins, is inspiring. AMEN brother!
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