LSU project touted

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Rendering provided by LSU
This illustration depicts LSU's Patrick F. Taylor Hall would look like after renovation.

Public, private funding planned for engineering complex

Gov. Bobby Jindal announced Tuesday a $100 million public-private partnership to renovate LSU’s Patrick F. Taylor Hall and turn it into a state-of-the-art engineering education complex.

Jindal said he will support $50 million in capital outlay funding for the venture. That money has to be approved by the state Legislature and the state Bond Commission before the project can move forward.

The remaining $50 million needed for the renovation is expected to be raised through private donations.

LSU’s College of Engineering, formerly called the Center for Engineering and Business Administration, has already raised about $8 million for the project, Jindal said.

LSU System President and Baton Rouge Chancellor William Jenkins said he’s optimistic that LSU can raise $42 million before the scheduled start of construction two years from now.

“We’ve got to get busy. We are at the start of the campaign and we have been in touch with our alumni and those who have an interest in the College of Engineering,” Jenkins said. “We believe they can help us.”

Jenkins called the renovation a component of maintaining LSU as a high-value and “comprehensive, research-focused” university for the state.

Jindal also weighed in on the statewide implications of renovating the 35-year-old, 300,000-square-foot building. He called the new construction essential to attract highly-qualified engineering students, faculty and researchers.

Estimates from the state’s higher education management board, the Louisiana Board of Regents and the Louisiana Workforce Commission predict the need for larger numbers — about 330 per year — of engineering and construction management graduates to meet current demand, Jindal said.

“States that are going to compete in today’s economy have to have the most skilled and productive workforce,” he said.

Roughly 560 students earn bachelor’s degrees from LSU’s College of Engineering each year, putting the school in the top 10 nationally.

According to a news release from Jindal’s press office, engineers in Louisiana typically earn salaries ranging from $83,000 to $108,000 per year plus benefits.

The renovated engineering facility should include new laboratories for teaching and research, expanded areas for student services, an academic support center, and several new spaces for graduate and undergraduate students.

A planned new annex dedicated to chemical engineering is also in the works, raising the area of the entire complex to more than 380,000 square feet.

LSU estimates the architectural design phase of the project will start in December, while construction should begin in fall 2014. The entire project is expected to be completed by fall 2016.

Rick Koubek, dean of LSU’s College of Engineering, said the investment in Taylor Hall will be a boon for the school as it pursues research opportunities.

The investment, Koubek said, will “prepare the next-generation engineering workforce with the skills needed to lead the industries driving our state’s economy.”

LSU’s plans for Taylor Hall share some similarities with the 14-years-in-the-making Business Education Complex next door, which was christened earlier this year.

That project was originally planned as a $60 million, 50-50, public-private venture, but LSU struggled to raise the private funds during lean economic times. However, the economic downturn led to a buyer’s market for construction jobs and lowered the total construction cost, putting the final price tag closer to $56 million.

The state ended up contributing about $27 million for the Business Education Complex building; LSU raised $18 million in funds; with the remaining money coming from an $8 million bridge loan from the private, nonprofit LSU Foundation.


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Comments (7)


1) Comment by phil - 04/10/2012

Not sure if I completely understand the public-private partnership and whether it is being fully explained. We already have a public-private partnership. Private citizens pay taxes to the government to get public things done. That partnership has worked very well for a long time. If this article means that private donations, with no strings attached, are the private part of the public-private partnership, then I guess that sounds good.

2) Comment by gvm - 03/10/2012

@TommyRucker: give it a rest already!!!! Blame years of unworkable Republican policy for the state of the economy - from 2000 thru 2008 especially. That "trickle down" mess sucks when it hits you doesn't it?

3) Comment by Preppy6917 - 03/10/2012

So like the battered spouse or abused child, now that LSU knows its place it will sing Jindal's praises any time he throws it some scraps.

4) Comment by Warp7 - 03/10/2012

Typical fantasy comments by blind Jindal followers. Same old propaganda. Wake up Louisiana and stop voting for a party (GOP) that is not in your best interest. The major problems facing the nation is a direct result of failed Republican policies. Don't forget that o. The day the President was sworn in, the right took an oath pledging to ensure that the President is not successful. One would have thought that their number one priority would have been to get our economy back up and running as number one in the world. The Party of No are great at putting out false information and revising history.

5) Comment by 8point6 - 03/10/2012

Thank you, Governor Jindal. You're doing what the majority of us want you to do. @TommyRucker: Well said.

6) Comment by TommyRucker - 03/10/2012

Let's not forget we are in a horrible economy and that makes the job Jindal is doing even more remarkable. If you want to blame someone for the cuts in the budget, unemployment then you had better consider reality and the truth and look at the person in the White House and the democratic party MOB. Jindal is by far the best governor this state has ever seen. He makes decisions based on the common good and these decisions are not easy, especially during the depressed economy which is getting worse thanks to Obama and his friends. My only questions is how are we going to get all these well educated engineers that we are paying to educate to stay in Louisiana so we can all benefit. It will help to continue to elect state government leaders who actually believe in and honestly practice free enterprise principles. Socialism in other countries is causing major brain drains in these countries (among other problems). Socialism is a cornerstone of Obama's principles and it will only make a bad situation worse as it has thru out the history of the world. Hopefully we won't have to learn this lesson the hard way. There are fewer opportunities and lower standards of living with a dominating socialism and that is where we are headed if we continue to vote for the democratic party mob. Wake up America, it is not to late but we are running out of time.

7) Comment by spqr - 03/10/2012

Yea, Jindal cares. Let us not forget LSU's budget has been slashed roughly 30-40% since he has been in office. Renovated building. Nice. And the professors to staff it? That is another question.