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Landmark College To Open New $9.6 Million Science, Technology And Innovation Center

The Nicole Goodner MacFarlane Center at Landmark College shows the college's commitment to science, technology, engineering and math, they say.
Howard Weiss-Tisman
/
VPR
The Nicole Goodner MacFarlane Center at Landmark College shows the college's commitment to science, technology, engineering and math, they say.

You can't miss the new Nicole Goodner MacFarlane Center when you enter Landmark College. 

The brand new 28,500 square-foot building dominates the view as you drive onto the Putney campus.

Michelle Bower is chair of the mathematics and computer science department and she says the school's new science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM center, makes a statement about Landmark's focus on research and science.

"What I think it says about the institution and about our students is that we believe that they have a lot of options," Bower said. "I think that it's a demonstrated commitment of the institution to the field and to our students. It's the first thing you see when you come to campus, so it's front and center."

Gov. Peter Shumlin will be on hand Saturday when Landmark College officially opens its new $9.6 million science, technology and innovation center.

The opening is being held as Landmark College also celebrates its 30th anniversary.

Landmark College offers specialized programming for students with learning disabilities.

The new STEM center, which is the first new academic building added to the campus since the school opened 30 years ago, includes four science labs, two computer classrooms and 12 faculty offices.

Students in the second-floor lounge of the MacFarlane Center at Landmark College.
Credit Tricia Stanley / Landmark College
/
Landmark College
Students in the second-floor lounge of the MacFarlane Center at Landmark College.

The labs are stocked with modern science and computer equipment and the rooms and halls are designed to encourage Landmark students to take risks they might otherwise shy away from in other labs.

Large windows look out over the campus and natural light streams in throughout the building

Landmark traditionally offered two-year associate's degrees and began offering four-year bachelor's degrees in 2012.

Landmark College president Peter Eden says the new building will allow the school to continue growing its programs.

Landmark College student Patrick Coffman, left, works with computer science professor Rick Joyce in a lab in the school's new MacFarlane Center.
Credit Howard Weiss-Tisman / VPR
/
VPR
Landmark College student Patrick Coffman, left, works with computer science professor Rick Joyce in a lab in the school's new MacFarlane Center.

"This fall we started a bachelor of science and computer science, so we've moved into STEM offerings and we needed to support those with the right learning environments and research environments. So we simply had to create a better facility to support these strategic programs our students want and need."

The MacFarlane Center also houses the Landmark College Institute for Research and Training, which receives National Science Foundation grants to do research on learning disability education.

Eden says the building was designed to bring the research center closer to the college classrooms and labs.

Copyright 2015 Vermont Public Radio

Howard Weiss-Tisman is VPR's southern Vermont correspondent.

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