Curris Center construction continues

Construction continues in the Curris Center on campus (Rebeca Mertins Chiodini, The News).

Ava Chuppe, Senior writer

The Curris Center’s construction projects, which have occupied space and restricted available restrooms in the building, are scheduled to continue throughout the spring semester and into the summer.

Construction locations on the first floor include the future Esports area, a reconfigured Sodexo office space, relocated post office boxes and single-occupancy restrooms. All of these locations are approaching completion and are expected to reopen by mid to late February, said Director of Facilities Management Jason Youngblood. 

A relocated space for the Center for Student Involvement will replace the former post office space on the second floor. The public restrooms on that floor are expected to be available for use by the end of January. The Student Involvement space may open by the middle of February, given the timely delivery and installation of the entrance.

On the third floor, construction is still underway on the main hallway and public restrooms. Polished concrete replaced the former clay tile in the hallway, and workers are still cleaning the area before reopening. The third floor restrooms are scheduled for completion by the end of February, and the entirety of the third floor is scheduled for reopening by March 1.

The second floor restrooms will reopen before the first floor restrooms are closed. In addition, Facilities Management staff have performed plumbing work and scheduled electrical shutdowns predominantly outside facility hours.

Some students, like electromechanical engineering technology major Evan Harvilla, said they do not feel the construction has interfered with their normal schedules.

“The construction has not impacted my life in any particular way, but I am overall unhappy with the renovation plans,” Harvilla said. “There’s a trend with buildings recently to make everything seem clean and sleek and feel more modern, and I feel it pulls the character from old buildings.”

Harvilla said the Curris Center could be expanded without making it feel clinical.

“They could fix the flowers in the rafters and give it more color with new paint, but we lose all that with the new style renovations,” Harvilla said. “The campus is old, and old buildings like the library feel charming, but the Curris Center is going to feel weird.”

Youngblood said the project has been divided into stages in an effort to minimize disruptions for students, faculty and staff.

Conversely, English education major Mikaela McChristian says the change has impacted her study routine.

“Last semester, I would go over and just study in between classes, and this semester, I have about an hour or hour and a half long breaks in between my classes,” McChristian said. “Instead of going to the Curris Center and grabbing a bite to eat…the loud noises just make me not able to focus, so now I’ve moved to the library.”

Over the summer, extensive construction will be scheduled to take place in the Welcome Center and in public and single-occupant restrooms on the first floor. Other projects will include flooring replacements in the first and second floor hallways and Starbucks, a reconfiguration of the wheelchair ramp leading to the bookstore, replacements of the door and window frames and glass at the bookstore and work in the new student and rocking chair lounges.