flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Technology defines growth at Ringling College of Arts & Design

University Buildings

Technology defines growth at Ringling College of Arts & Design

Named America's “most wired campus" in 2014, Ringling is adding a library, visual arts center, soundstage, and art museum. 


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 13, 2016
Technology defines growth at Ringling College of Arts & Design

Shepley Bulfinch designed the new library at Ringling College of Arts & Design. Images courtesy Ringling College of Arts & Design. Click here for larger view.

When Larry Thompson became President of Ringling College of Arts & Design, Sarasota, Fla., 16 years ago, it had 850 students. Thompson recalls worrying, at the time, about the viability of the school’s business model. “Private schools that survive are those that move into the top tier,” he says.

So his administration drew up a strategic plan in 2004 that focused on investing in technology, and defraying the cost by increasing its enrollment. Within three years, the school had expanded to 11 majors, from seven, and was on its way to growing its student body to 1,300, where it stands today.

To support that growth, Ringling has engaged in an aggressive building campaign, with some projects providing revenue streams.

Its first new building, completed in 2006, was a 75,000-sf student center with a rent-generating residence hall. An entire floor of the facility was allocated for computer animation and game art, which has since emerged as a major program. The walls are decorated with posters of movies that alumni have worked on. “It became an important part of Ringling’s branding,” says Thompson.

 

Interior of Ringling's new $18 million, 46,000-sf library. Click image to enlarge.

 

In 2010, the college completed a 75,000-sf academic center primarily for new majors, which included one of the country’s first business-art design programs. One floor of the building is dedicated to motion design, others to graphic design and drawing studios.

Apparently, the school’s investment is paying off, as U.S. News & World Report in 2014 cited Ringling as America’s “most wired campus.”

The college isn’t finished expanding, either. It has four construction projects under way:

  • An $18 million, 46,000-sf library, scheduled to open this fall, that is designed by Shepley Bulfinch to adapt to new technologies as they emerge.
  • The Richard and Barbara Basch Visual Arts Center, designed by Sweet Sparkman Architects and scheduled to open by year’s end. It will house advanced tools and facilities for woodworking, glass, ceramics, printmaking, photography, and digital fabrication, in addition to gallery space.
  • A 25,000-sf film soundstage and 5,000-sf post-production space, designed by DSDG Architects. When it opens next year, the space will expand the campus’s Studio Lab program, which brings industry professionals to Sarasota to mentor students.
  • The Sarasota Museum of Art, designed by Apex Studio Suarez, with The Lawson Group as architect of record. It is an adaptive reuse of a historic high school that hadn’t been used in 20 years. When it opens in early 2017, one third of the 57,000-sf building will be used for museum exhibits, with the rest of the space allocated to continuing education—again, another revenue stream. (For most of its projects, Ringling uses Willis Construction as its GC.)

The museum wasn’t in Ringling’s original strategic plans. But, as Thompson explains, “it presented an opportunity for us to tap into the Sarasota community,” many of whose members collect art and engage the campus.

When Thompson presented the museum project to the school’s board, “I told them to think of it as our football field,” in terms of revenue potential. “They got it.”

 

The Richard and Barbara Basch Visual Arts Center. Click image to enlarge.

Related Stories

University Buildings | Apr 2, 2019

Denning House completes at Stanford University

Ennead Architects designed the building.

University Buildings | Mar 27, 2019

Veterans Resource Center at Cypress College breaks ground

Sundt Construction is building the project.

Mixed-Use | Feb 21, 2019

An R&D-oriented innovation district is taking shape in the heart of Durham, N.C.

Its buildout has included converting old tobacco warehouses into offices and labs.

University Buildings | Jan 29, 2019

The Colorado School of Mines CoorsTek Center opens

Bohlin Cywinski Jackson designed the building.

University Buildings | Dec 17, 2018

SCUP and University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing release study results on lactation policy and facilities in U.S. higher education

There is a wide variability between how campuses accommodate the needs of breastfeeding mothers.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021