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UC Merced may double in physical size

Posted 3/18/2015 by Central Valley Business Times


MERCED

UC Merced may double in physical size


MERCED


March 18, 2015 9:52am


•  Expansion would create 10,000 construction jobs


•  “Our development strategy will allow us to resume rapid enrollment growth”


The University of California, Merced, is asking the UC Board of Regents to okay a new development strategy that will more than double the physical capacity of campus facilities by 2020 in an effort to accommodate record numbers of student applicants, increase regional and statewide access to a UC education and support the university’s most critical academic and research priorities.


The newest UC campus, which opened in 2005 with 875 students and now enrolls more than 6,200, would employ a team of private developers and an innovative, fast-track construction model to expand as rapidly and cost-effectively as possible, it says.


“Plans call for the new facilities to be built as a mixed-use, master-planned development on a 219-acre, university-owned site that includes the existing campus.”


By contracting with a private, multifaceted team to develop the entire project at once, rather than sequentially as individual projects, the university expects to save significant time and money compared with traditional procurement approaches.


The “2020 Project” is expected to create 10,800 new construction jobs in the San Joaquin Valley during the construction period and generate an estimated $1.9 billion in direct and indirect economic impact in the region. Statewide, the totals are 12,600 new construction jobs and $2.4 billion in combined economic impact, it says.


The expansion project will also significantly increase permanent university employment and support enrollment growth to about 10,000 students, the university says.


Construction could begin in late 2016 or the first half of 2017, with phased delivery of facilities in the 2018-2020 timeframe.


UC Merced will also seek Board of Regents approval to begin design work on its Downtown Center project, an administrative building complex that would serve as the hub for its growing presence in downtown Merced. At approximately 75,000-100,000 gross square feet, the facility would allow the university to consolidate much of its administrative activity in a central location that it says will help bring economic vitality to the downtown area and promote a closer relationship between the campus and community.


The Downtown Center would be built on land purchased by the university in June 2014 at the corner of N and 18th streets, directly across from City Hall.


The rapid addition of academic, research, housing and recreational facilities is in direct response to growing student demand from the San Joaquin Valley and across the state, it says.


About 97 percent of UC Merced undergraduates are from California. The campus leads the UC system in the percentage of students who are from under-represented ethnic groups, who are the first in their families to attend a four-year institution, and who come from low-income families that receive federal Pell grants.


Despite a 14 percent increase in undergraduate applications for Fall 2015 — the highest in the UC system — the campus has been forced to slow enrollment growth due to severe capacity constraints. UC Merced received 17,000 applications for Fall 2014 but had seats for fewer than 10 percent of its applicants.


“UC Merced’s progress in just 10 years is an exciting development for the university, the Merced community and the state of California,” says UC Merced Chancellor Dorothy Leland. “Our development strategy will allow us to resume rapid enrollment growth and advance the regional economy in keeping with our core mission. It will also allow us to build strategically, aligning facility additions with our emerging academic and research priorities and creating a sense of community that encourages faculty, student and staff collaboration.”


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