Ohio Archives - 鶹 /tag/ohio/ Design - Construction - Operations Mon, 09 Mar 2026 14:07:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2026/01/cropped-SCN_favicon-32x32.png Ohio Archives - 鶹 /tag/ohio/ 32 32 Miami University Trustees Approve $242 Million Multipurpose Arena, with Broader Recreation Upgrades Planned /2026/03/09/miami-trustees-approve-242-million-multipurpose-arena-with-broader-recreation-upgrades-planned/ /2026/03/09/miami-trustees-approve-242-million-multipurpose-arena-with-broader-recreation-upgrades-planned/#respond Mon, 09 Mar 2026 14:07:19 +0000 /?p=54772 Miami University said the venue is expected to be ready for the start of the athletic season in fall 2028 and is intended to address space limitations and building-system operations and maintenance challenges at Millett Hall, the current arena.

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Miami University said the venue is expected to be ready for the start of the athletic season in fall 2028 and is intended to address space limitations and building-system operations and maintenance challenges at Millett Hall, the current arena. | Photo Credit: Miami University

What You Need to Know

  • Miami University’s Board of Trustees approved a resolution authorizingthe constructionof a new multipurpose arena at Cook Field.
  • The university estimates arena construction at about$242 million, with up to$281 millionauthorized for the arena and related ancillary costs.
  • The arena is expected to be ready for the start of the athletic season infall 2028, addressing space and building-system challenges at the existing Millett Hall.
  • Miami University also outlined intramural and recreation upgrades at the Millett Hall site and at Chestnut Fields, with construction expected to run May–September 2026.

Learn More

OXFORD,Ohio—Miami University’s Board of Trustees has approved plans to build a new multipurpose arena at Cook Field, a project the university says will expand event capacity, modernize athleticoperationsand support a broader campus events district.

University officials estimated arena construction at approximately $242 million, with trustees authorizing up to $281 million for the arena and related ancillary costs.

In a statement, the university said the venue is expected to be ready for the start of the athletic season in fall 2028 and is intended to address space limitations and building-system operations and maintenance challenges at Millett Hall, the current arena.Millett Hall opened in 1968 and initially housed men’s basketball, with volleyball and women’s basketball added in 1974. Miami said renovating Millett Hall to add practice courts and a dedicated volleyball court wouldrequireat least $175 million and would take the facility offline for multiple years.

Miami University leaders also framed the new facility as a campuswide event venue, saying it would support concurrent student activities and other major events such as commencements, concerts, creative arts performances and career fairs.

“We are in a unique and dynamic time for Miami University Athletics. It is time to innovate, invest, and inspire. A new arena benefits all of Miami and will serve as a gateway and beacon for the university,” according to an article from Miami University.

President Gregory Crawford tied the project to student experience and local economic goals. “This is a student-centered project that will create a vibrant new space intended to bring people together and support and engage our students. A new arena will provide the foundation for an events district in the heart of campus to benefit students, reinvigorate the community, and strengthen our local economy,” he said in an article published by the University.

Beyond the arena, Miami said the project will also advance recreation upgrades elsewhere on campus. Planned work includes intramural soccer and flag football fields at the Millett Hall site, along with a walking path and exercise stations. At Chestnut Fields, the university described a multipurpose complex supporting full-size soccer fields, softball fields, flag football fields, a rugby field, a lacrosse field and intramural soccer fields.

Construction of new recreation facilities at Millett and Chestnut Fields is expected to begin in May 2026 and be completed in September 2026, allowing Cook Field to go offline in September 2026 to begin arena construction, according to the university.

This article is based on reporting originally published byMiami UniversityonFeb. 27, 2026.

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Ohio Dental School Holds Groundbreaking Ceremony /2024/11/06/ohios-first-public-school-holds-groundbreaking-ceremony/ Wed, 06 Nov 2024 22:54:38 +0000 /?p=53103 Though initial construction on Northeast Ohio Medical University’s $25 million Bitonte College of Dentistry began months ago, administrators and trustees recently celebrated progress in a symbolic groundbreaking ceremony.

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By Fay Harvey

ROOTSTOWN, Ohio — Though initial construction on Northeast Ohio Medical University’s $25 million Bitonte College of Dentistry began months ago, administrators and trustees recently celebrated progress in a symbolic groundbreaking ceremony.

When complete, Bitonte College of Dentistry will be the first public dental college in Northeast Ohio and will add to 1973 founded NEOMED’s repertoire of medical studies, including medicine, pharmacy and doctoral degrees and research opportunities in additional medical and life science areas.

The design for the clinical and learning spaces in the new college has been finalized and both simulation labs and community dental clinics are projected to be operational next year, with Ohio-based DeSalvo Construction as construction manager.

Frank Beck, inaugural dean of the Bitonte College of Dentistry, spoke on the importance of dental education and workforce enrichment at the ceremony, according to a statement by NEOMED.

“The Ohio Dental Association has identified oral health as the number one unmet health care need for Ohioans. Dental conditions represent the number one reason patients present in hospital emergency departments” he said. “… we stand here today to address Ohio’s dental emergency.”

The college will welcome its first class of students in fall 2025.

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Cleveland State Engineering Building Obtains LEED Gold /2020/09/25/cleveland-state-engineering-building-obtains-leed-gold/ Fri, 25 Sep 2020 14:08:49 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=48788 The United States Green Building Council (USGBC) recently awarded LEED Gold certification to Cleveland State University’s Washkewicz Hall, home to the College of Engineering.

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By SCN Staff

CLEVELAND The United States Green Building Council (USGBC) recently awarded LEED Gold certification to Cleveland State University’s Washkewicz Hall, home to the College of Engineering.

Completed in 2017, Washkewicz Hall is the sixth building on CSU’s campus to receive LEED certification.

“Washkewicz Hall’s LEED certification demonstrates tremendous green building leadership,” said Mahesh Ramanujam, president and CEO, USGBC. “LEED was created to make the world a better place and revolutionize our buildings and communities by providing everyone with access to healthy, green and high performing buildings. Cleveland State’s most recent certification is a prime example of how the innovative work of project teams can create local solutions that contribute to making a global difference.”

Sustainable features of Washkewicz Hall include the following:

  • Site utilization that optimizes green space to reduce stormwater runoff;
  • Low-flow toilets and faucets that reduce water consumption by 30 percent;
  • Energy-efficient mechanical systems;
  • 70 percent of electricity from renewable sources;
  • 25 percent recycled steel in building materials;
  • Light-colored roof material to reflect heat and maintain a cooler temperature within the building;
  • Materials, paints, flooring and wall materials contain no- or low-VOCs for improved indoor air quality.

CBLH and Harley Ellis Devereaux (HED) led design and engineering on this approximately $46 million project. Gilbane was the construction manager at risk.

“[Throughout construction, we] used the building as a learning tool, involving students a faculty with regular tours and monthly bulletins about what work was transpiring,” explained Travis Okel, project manager, Gilbane Building Company.

“The team set out with the goal of achieving LEED Gold certification, so knowing that the process of design and construction reached that ambitious target is very exciting,” said Jennifer McMillin,CSU director ofsustainability, in a press release.

“As an institution of higher education, CSU has an opportunity to educate students about environmental sustainability both in the classroom and in the campus environment. Designing and operating green buildings is one of our opportunities to demonstrate our commitment to energy and water conservation.”

Other LEED certified buildings at CSU include Julka Hall (LEED Gold), Center for Innovation in Medical Professions (LEED Silver), Euclid Commons (LEED Silver), the CSU Student Center (LEED Silver) and the CSU Recreation Center (LEED Certified).

 

 

 

 

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Denison University in Ohio Begins Major Construction Project /2020/04/02/denison-university-in-ohio-begins-major-construction-project/ Thu, 02 Apr 2020 14:00:37 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=48144 Denison University, a liberal arts university in central Ohio, is undergoing construction this year on a mega-project that involves a new student apartment building, updating its dormitories, building a new student wellness center, and more.

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By Lisa Kopochinski

GRANVILLE, Ohio—Denison University, a liberal arts university in central Ohio, is undergoing construction this year on a mega-project that involves a new student apartment building, updating its dormitories, building a new student wellness center, and more.

The reported in January that, according to the university, the projects include a more than $25 million student apartment building, an approximately $16 million renovation of half of its existing dormitories, and a new approximately $10 million student wellness center. Information about the architect firm and general contractor to be involved has not yet been disclosed.

Work this summer will be on Crawford, Shorney, Smith, Curtis and Myers halls, with King Hall scheduled for 2020-21 construction for a fall 2021 opening.

The new Student Wellness Center is currently in the design phase.

“We’re thinking about putting it on the steep area across from our parking garage,” said Art Chonko, Denison University director of facilities services.

When completed, the new center will offer counseling, wellness and opportunities for training and student wellness activities, he said.

Denison University Spokeswoman Ginny Sharkey told the Business Journal that the investments “are about ensuring our campus is a safe, comfortable environment for learning, living and working.”

These projects could help Denison’s 2,300 students navigate an increasingly competitive higher education environment, in which it has become more critical for colleges to take proactive measures to attract students.

The reported that another major piece of construction being contemplated is a new central heating plant on campus. If that happens, the new plant would replace the one currently in use in the building located across the street from Ross’ Granville Market on South Main Street. The cost of this project has not yet been disclosed.

Chonko noted that heat generated from that plant is currently, and rather inefficiently, pushed through old pipes running under Mulberry Street up to the university. If plans go forward, the new plant “would move to a bowl near the Mitchell Center,” so it would be inside the campus and not in view from Pearl Street or elsewhere.

“It would be in area of parking lot behind the Mitchell Center…buried in the hill,” said Chonko.

Additionally, the university has identified safety concerns related to the street running along the west side of the center and connecting West Broadway and West College Street. Currently, on-street parking along the connector results in line-of-sight issues tied to a crosswalk there.

“We have some cars going through there pretty fast now,” he said. “The crosswalk has some people stepping out from a behind a (parked) car,” to see if it’s clear to cross.”

Mayor Melissa Hartfield expressed some reservations about any plans that might significantly reduce parking in that area, but also made it clear, there is no desire “to sacrifice safety for parking.”

In a statement, Chonko said that Denison’s slate of projects are being funded by a combination of sources, including bond issuances, a university campaign called Unlocking Potential: Investing in Denison, and “generous alumni support.” The campaign, so far, has raised $207.4 million of its $225 million goal.

The university’s major focus is concentrated on updating all of its student housing over the next several years.

Overall, he added, “It’s going to be a busy year.”

 

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Construction Underway at Ohio Elementary School /2019/09/20/construction-underway-at-ohio-elementary-school/ Fri, 20 Sep 2019 14:24:57 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47449 Construction is underway at a new elementary school for New Bremen Local Schools in New Bremen, Ohio.

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By SCN Staff

NEW BREMEN, OhioConstruction is underway at a new elementary school for New Bremen Local Schools in New Bremen, Ohio.

Officials from New Bremen Local School District, Gilbane Building Company, Garmann/Miller & Associates, Ohio Facilities Construction Commission and students celebrated the official groundbreaking for the new elementary facility earlier this year that will provide a modern learning environment for students in grades K-6.

Gilbane Building Company is serving as construction manager for the new 71,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art elementary facility. Connected to the existing high school, all classrooms will be grouped by grade level with extended learning center spaces outside of the traditional classrooms. Special education rooms will be spaced throughout the academic areas. Natural daylight will be a primary emphasis in each of the K-6 classrooms,

“Gilbane is extremely excited to be a part of the New Bremen School project team,” said Matt Neimeyer, Gilbane Building Company project manager.

“However, our team members are especially excited. We have three team members that live in the district or in a neighboring district. And, let me tell you, in construction, that does not happen often. Our team has a vested interest in the success of the project and will remain in the community for years to come and are excited to build in the community we live in! We look forward to getting this project started and continuing our engagement with the district and in the community.”

The addition and renovations to the new elementary school will provide a modern learning environment. The student dining area will be used as a multi-purpose space with a sports floor. The media center, computer lab, art and music rooms surround the interior courtyard, which will be used as a safe outdoor learning space.

The project also includes additional renovations to the existing high school, parking lot repairs and abatement/demolition of the existing elementary school. Exterior materials will include a masonry veneer and standing seam metal room to complement the existing high school.

The completion date is slated for August 2020.

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Ohio Elementary School Build Will Not Exceed $35 Million /2019/09/04/ohio-elementary-school-build-will-not-exceed-35-million/ Wed, 04 Sep 2019 14:52:11 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47391 In a recent “guaranteed-maximum price” agreement, it has been confirmed that the North Royalton School District will pay Hammond Construction Inc. of Canton, Ohio, no more than $35 million to manage construction of a new elementary school.

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By Lisa Kopochinski

NORTH ROYALTON, Ohio—In a recent “guaranteed-maximum price” agreement, it has been confirmed that the North Royalton School District will pay Hammond Construction Inc. of Canton, Ohio, no more than $35 million to manage construction of a new elementary school. The school will be located at thesouthwest corner of State Road and Valley Parkway in North Royalton, a suburb of Cleveland.

Under the GMP agreement, if the final project cost exceeds this $35 million figure, Hammond will be responsible for the overage, unless the district decides to expand the scope of work. In that event, the expanded cost would be the responsibility of the school district.

Conversely, if the project costs less than the $35 million. the savings would return to the district.

A groundbreaking ceremony for the new elementary school—which will span approximately 147,000 square feet—was held August 30 at the construction site.

Tree clearing and sitework started in March, while construction of footers, steel beams and columns is expected to begin shortly.

“We are pleased with where the (GMP) numbers came in,” said Schools Superintendent Greg Gurka.

“We are all aware that costs have escalated in school construction since our bond issue was passed [in May 2017]. This can be seen in districts all around us. However, this elementary (school) GMP will allow us to continue to stay on budget and on schedule.”

The new school will replace Albion, Royal View and Valley Vista elementary schools. It is part of an overall district reconstruction and renovation project, which also involves a building addition and renovation at North Royalton High School, and a renovation of North Royalton Middle School.

 

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Ohio School Adds Nearly 2,000 Solar Panels to Roof /2019/08/30/ohio-school-adds-nearly-2000-solar-panels-to-roof/ Fri, 30 Aug 2019 15:05:36 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47362 Federal Hocking Local Schools recently installed 1,968 solar panels to the roof of the Federal Hocking Middle and High School campus in Stewart.

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By SCN Staff

STEWART, Ohio—Federal Hocking Local Schools recently installed 1,968 solar panels to the roof of the Federal Hocking Middle and High School campus in Stewart.

The project—which is expected to cover 70 percent of the building’s energy needs during the year—has been promoted as a way to teach students about the renewable energy industry.

“Solar and renewable energy are the way of the future,” said Federal Hocking Superintendent George Wood. “But getting from here to there will take big actions by big organizations and institutions, like schools. Our district is a demonstration of what other districts can do.”

He said an outside company would own the plant and the school district would “buy energy from them at a reduced cost.”

The array was built and installed by a partnership consisting of the installer Third Sun Solar; New Resource Solutions, that structured the financing and Foundation Renewable Energy Company; and the system owner and operator.

“Third Sun Solar has installed solar on more than 70 schools, but this project is really exciting because it is right here in our community,” said Geoff Greenfield, Third Sun Solar president and co-founder.

“While the financial benefits to the school are very attractive, we believe that the benefits to our local economy—like the growing number of solar jobs—are also very important.”

The school district also invested $400,000 from its reserve account to reduce the cost of the electricity it would be purchasing and to “speed up the buy-back option on the plant,” added Wood.

“We will see reduced annual costs, accelerate our path to ownership and have more money for annual expenses.”

During the launch of this project in July, Wood urged other schools to take the same route.

“You’re generating cheap, clean energy. You’re getting an educational benefit from kids and you’re being a good steward of public resources. Seems to me it’s a win-win solution for everyone.”

 

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Ohio High School Auditorium Aims for Fall 2020 Debut /2019/08/21/ohio-high-school-auditorium-aims-for-fall-2020-debut/ Wed, 21 Aug 2019 16:57:22 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47314 By Lisa Kopochinski HILLSBORO, Ohio—Hillsboro City Schoolshas contracted withWoolpertto provide full design services for its $6 million high school auditorium at Hillsboro High School, located approximately 60 miles east of Cincinnati. The new 23,000-square-foot auditorium will seat 800 and include flexible space for changing rooms and/or locker rooms. The school has an enrollment of approximately...

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By Lisa Kopochinski

HILLSBORO, Ohio—Hillsboro City Schoolshas contracted withWoolpertto provide full design services for its $6 million high school auditorium at Hillsboro High School, located approximately 60 miles east of Cincinnati.

The new 23,000-square-foot auditorium will seat 800 and include flexible space for changing rooms and/or locker rooms. The school has an enrollment of approximately 750 students.

Woolpert—a firm with numerous locations across the U.S. that offers architecture, engineering and geospatial (AEG) services—is the architect on this project.

Woolpert Project Manager Todd Ford—who is also a 2002 Hillsboro graduate—said the design of the auditorium will mesh with the existing school and include technology and amenities specific to the school’s needs.

“There will be a 40-inch-high stage, which creates optimal viewing from all seats, LED lighting and acoustical design to ensure those on stage are properly seen and heard by the crowd. Hillsboro will be one of the few schools in the area that can hold its entire school population in its auditorium, and we want to ensure they are served appropriately and effectively.”

The main entrance for the auditorium will be through the high school building, which will support safety and security for students and staff. The parking lot will be reconfigured to allow for this school expansion, but retain the same amount of parking spaces.

Woolpert has performed a facility master plan, and Ford has performed multiple design projects at the high school.

He said Woolpert’s acquisition ofWaller, Todd & SadlerArchitects this past January has deepened and broadened Woolpert’s educational design capabilities.

“Waller, Todd & Sadler’s experience with K-12 and higher education facilities is nationally known and highly respected. They know the ins and outs of high school auditoriums from ideal row breaks to ADA requirements to subsurface drainage to the pros and cons of orchestra pits. Their expertise is invaluable and will be well utilized for this and future projects.”

The general contractor for this project will be secured in early September. Construction is scheduled to begin this fall with a completion date slated for fall 2020.

 

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Kenyon College Breaks Ground on Building Trio /2019/07/15/kenyon-college-breaks-ground-on-building-trio/ Mon, 15 Jul 2019 17:59:47 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=47175 Three buildings designed by GUND Partnership have broken ground at Kenyon College.

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By SCN Staff

GAMBIER, Ohio—Three buildings designed by GUND Partnership have broken ground at Kenyon College. The new West Quad buildings include a new library, an interdisciplinary academic building and an admissions building with financial aid center for student recruitment. Construction for all buildings will be complete in 2021.

A new highly flexible state-of-the-art library will support active and collaborative learning. It will feature a variety of environments to encourage student growth, curiosity and exploration. Special Collections will be prominently exhibited at the building’s entry and a teaching lab will create more opportunity to integrate the unique collections into course work. Academic Advising, Career Development, the Registrar and Student Accessibility Services will move to the library as an integrated hub connecting work inside the classroom with work outside of it. To encourage innovation, two sandbox spaces, one for technology and one for teaching, will provide students and faculty needed space to explore transformative technology and teaching practices. The Office of Institutional Research will be located in the library, capitalizing on the College’s commitment to assessing the inputs and outcomes of a Kenyon education.

With a focus on accessibility and openness, the new academic building will facilitate cross-pollination of ideas across and beyond the social science disciplines and will contain the anthropology collections and lab. The building features open commons on each floor, flexible classroom spaces adaptable to continuing changes in pedagogy, classroom sizes of 16-40 students, collaborative workspaces, and a 300-seat auditorium.

A new home for admissions and financial aid will bring together the offices, which currently operate in two separate buildings. Campus tours will depart from a new terrace anchoring the north end of the West Quad and will bring prospective students into the academic core. Multi-purpose spaces inside the building will allow greater flexibility in supporting and celebrating the campus community. All three buildings are pursuing LEED Certification with the library designed to achieve LEED Gold. Together, these individual projects strengthen the fabric of the entire campus and retain the distinctive identity that Kenyon has developed over its 195-year history.

These projects join two recently completed buildings for Kenyon’s renowned English department, also designed by GUND. Each provides modern office and academic spaces important in the continued recruitment of great talent to one of Kenyon’s most popular majors. The new West Quad will further Kenyon’s impact on student success, from the time a prospective student steps on campus to the time they celebrate commencement, positioning them to define and achieve their post-graduate goals.

GUND Partnership works across the country with leading academic and cultural institutions to explore the power and potential of the built environment.

 

 

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DLR Group Wraps New Phase of Oberlin College Green Arts District /2018/12/19/dlr-group-wraps-new-phase-of-oberlin-college-green-arts-district/ Wed, 19 Dec 2018 14:53:27 +0000 http://schoolconstructionnews.com/?p=45961 Oberlin College recently celebrated the opening of the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Annex, part of a multi-phased design that includes the newly-completed Irene and Alan Wurtzel Theater.

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OBERLIN, Ohio — Oberlin College recently celebrated the opening of the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Annex, part of a multi-phased design that includes the newly-completed Irene and Alan Wurtzel Theater. Nestled alongside the 1956 Hall Auditorium, this highly adaptable space encompasses nearly 24,000 SF, and serves as a multi-form home for Oberlin’s theater, dance, and opera departments. DLR Group|Westlake Reed Leskosky (WRL) partnered with Marous Brothers Construction to serve as the designer for the design-build delivery of the project.

In addition to the adaptable theater, the Eric Baker NordPerforming Arts Annex also boasts a new lobby and event space, rehearsal space, dressing rooms, and scene and costume shops shared by both stage houses, as well as classrooms, labs, and studios for acting and the arts. The theater completes yet another phase of DLR Group|WRL’s Green Arts District Master Plan for Oberlin; other projects completed by the firm as part of the master plan include the newly LEED Platinum-Certified Birenbaum Innovation and PerformanceCenter, the award-winning Film Studies facility in the original Apollo Theatre, and the renovation study for the Hall Auditorium.

DLR Group|WRL’s new theater design offers a contemporary addition to the original 1956 modern landmark. Addressing the auditorium’s current limitations in size and accessibility, our design brings the complex up to contemporary standards while maintaining the modernist structure and establishing continuity between new and old venues.

Experts in DLR Group|WRL’s in-house comprehensive theater specialties group, the Innovative Technology Design Group (ITDG), provided planning and design to bring modernized acoustic, audiovisual (A/V), and theater technical elements to the new adaptable Irene and Alan Wurtzel Theater. Working in tandem with the architectural and engineering teams, ITDG designers detailed new technology solutions to complement the facility’s existing technology and replace aging systems.

Acoustic work included mechanical, electrical, and plumbing (MEP) noise and vibration control design, sound isolation design to allow the adaptable theater to operate simultaneously with the existing Hall Auditorium, and room acoustic design to promote voice projection, speech clarity, and audio system fidelity in the adaptable theater as well as the rehearsal space.

Enhanced A/V elements include distributed audio systems, video distribution capabilities, production intercom systems, performance audio systems that are flexible and portable for various configurations, and video projection systems.

Theater technical design for the adaptable theater include a comprehensive integrated lighting control system that allows for operation of venue lighting through wall stations or lighting consoles, distributed power and data connections for performance lighting, new inventory of performance lighting fixtures, house and stage masking drapery, portable modular seating riser system with integrated step lighting to allow for multiple seating configurations, and a catwalk system with supplementary rigging pipes for hanging lighting, drapery, scenery, audio, and other production needs.

Central to the theater is its adaptable design, which provides new performance opportunities for faculty and students by expanding the types of productions the college’s theater, dance, and opera departments can offer. Before the Performing Arts Annex, the college’s theater and dance departments would have to host their 15-18 yearly performances in either the 550-seat HallAuditorium or the Little Theatre, which has an 80-seat audience capacity.

The theater addition to the Eric Baker Nord Performing Arts Annex offers the campus and the greater Northeast Ohio area with a flexible, medium-sized venue where performers can experiment with new types of productions and students can explore modern curriculum. Thanks to its adaptable design, seating in the multi-form theater can be reconfigured to around the stage rather than directly in front of it, shifting the dynamic, approach, and sightlines between the audience and the performers.

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