TU's new Science Complex opens
Complex a necessary addition after 130% enrollment surge between 1998 and 2018
By Cody Boteler on February 18, 2021
Students returning to Towson University for spring term will find that campus has grown by 320,000 square feet.
The Science Complex is now TU鈥檚 largest academic structure鈥攕ignificantly larger than Smith Hall鈥檚 220,000 square feet. It includes 50 teaching laboratories, 30 research laboratories, 50 classrooms, eight lecture halls, 10 collaborative student spaces, an outdoor classroom leading to the Glen Arboretum, a rooftop greenhouse complex, a new planetarium and an observatory.
鈥淭he completion of the new science complex marks the result of years of planning and effort from our faculty, staff and partners, including the University System of Maryland Board of Regents, Chancellor Jay A. Perman, Governor Larry Hogan and our state legislative leaders, who have shown unwavering support to this affirmation of TU鈥檚 impact on Maryland,鈥 says President Kim Schatzel. 鈥淭his impressive complex will bolster TU鈥檚 nationally-recognized STEM programming, and will enhance TU鈥檚 capacity to fulfill its promise as an anchor institution, supplying prepared leaders to meet Maryland鈥檚 workforce demands.鈥
The facility, made possible in part by generous state funding, supports TU鈥檚 rapidly growing Fisher College of Science & Mathematics (FCSM), which has swelled by more than 2,000 students since 1997.
鈥淭he old Smith Hall served our science departments well for 55 years, but it鈥檚 a 20th-century facility built mainly for teaching. The new Science Complex incorporates 21st-century design, layout, technology and research space,鈥 says David Vanko, dean of the FCSM. 鈥淚t鈥檚 what our faculty and students need and demand, and I鈥檓 excited that it will serve TU well for the next 55-plus years.鈥
Towson University鈥檚 investment in the Science Complex makes a strong statement about how important science education and research鈥攁t graduate and undergraduate levels鈥攁re to the university.
Further, it shows that TU, which aims to soon begin construction on a new facility for health care and health sciences classes, is committed to serving the state for generations to come.
The 鈥渉eart of the complex鈥 is the Science Commons, says Vanko, a multistory atrium at the center of the new complex. It includes ample seating and work space, theater-style seating for presentations or events and access to a Student Success Center.
It is also a new gateway between the 7800 York Road Building and Stephens Hall.
The five-story building includes a lactation/nursing room and gender-inclusive restrooms in addition to gendered ones. Lecture halls in the building have wide access ways for ease of mobility. The building features large rain gardens for stormwater remediation and the latest technology in its classrooms and laboratories, giving students the tools they need for success
Construction required the removal of 89 trees, which were replaced by 98 new trees.
Among those removed was a large white oak, Maryland鈥檚 state tree. But the tree, which
was about 80 years old, will live on in the new building, Vanko says.
A ring slice of the trunk was preserved and will be installed on the third floor in
an interactive space so students and visitors can trace history through the tree鈥檚
rings.
It鈥檚 a potent symbol of the building鈥檚 connection to the Glen Arboretum, a living
museum and classroom next to the Science Complex鈥攁nd Towson University鈥檚 commitment
to sustainability.
In addition to the outdoor classroom that leads to the Glen, multiple classrooms overlook the arboretum. Entrances on the building鈥檚 west side lead quickly to the Glen, allowing students and others to move easily from the new Science Complex directly into the forest and other parts of campus.
鈥淭he whole idea is that the Glen is an educational extension of the Science Complex,鈥 Vanko says.
This story is one of several related to President Kim Schatzel鈥檚 priorities for Towson University: TU Matters to Maryland.
Campus construction
Learn more about ongoing construction projects on campus, including the Brand New U and plans for a new College of Health Professions building.