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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
SDSU Unveils Bold Plan for Growth
CONTACT: Jack Beresford
SDSU Marketing & Communications
(619) 594-2448
jack.beresford@sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Monday, October
11, 2004 -- San Diego State University today unveiled a responsive
20-year growth plan intended to help the campus meet future demand
for higher education.
SDSUs Campus Master Plan will guide the physical
development of the campus through 2025 as it grows to serve an increasing
number of Californians. University leaders say the updated plan
will benefit the region and state by allowing SDSU to build necessary
facilities to serve additional students and recruit top faculty.
The Campus Master Plan revision is an important
effort for the university, said Stephen L. Weber, SDSU President.
It will increase the universitys capacity to serve at
a time when student enrollment demand at SDSU is at an all-time
high.
With nearly 8,000 graduates each year
most of whom remain in San Diego SDSU plays a key role in
preparing the local workforce. We are the largest importer of bright
minds to San Diego; this plan will ensure the universitys
continued ability to contribute to the regions prosperity,
said Weber.
According to the California Post-Secondary Education
Commission, there will be an increase of more than 700,000 students
seeking higher education in the state by 2010-11, a trend often
referred to as Tidal Wave II. The California State University (CSU)
has indicated that no new campuses will be built in the immediate
future requiring the systems existing 23 campuses to
accommodate future student enrollment demand.
SDSUs updated Campus Master Plan is a result
of the work of the Campus Master Plan committee that was tasked
with developing a strategy for the long-term growth of the campus.
The committee made up of faculty, staff, students and alumni
proposed a plan to increase SDSUs enrollment capacity,
while planning future facilities on property owned by the university
and SDSU Foundation adjacent to the main campus.
The committee agreed that the growth of the
main campus area is the best way to utilize SDSUs resources
and achieve our educational objectives, said Fred Hornbeck,
chair of the SDSU Senate and a member of the committee.
The plan proposes an increase in SDSUs enrollment
capacity to 35,000 full-time equivalent students (FTES) over the
next 20 years at a growth rate of approximately 3 percent per year.
(In order to account for both full-time and part-time students,
one full-time equivalent student equates to approximately 1.2 students
on campus). Currently, the universitys enrollment is capped
at 25,000 FTES.
Future classroom and support facilities are proposed
at Alvarado Campus Park, located immediately east of the SDSU campus
on Alvarado Road. A shuttle service will connect the main campus
with Alvarado Campus Park. Other projects include a 300-bed residence
hall, a new Student Union building and a 120-room hotel along Alvarado
Road.
Trolley service to SDSU, scheduled to begin in
mid-2005, is expected to significantly improve access to the campus
easing parking and traffic flow. In addition, the university
proposes to grow into a more residential campus, with the goal of
housing at least 25 percent of all students on campus, within walking
distance or around trolley stations.
The plan also proposes the development of affordable,
high quality housing for faculty, staff, retired faculty and graduate
students at Adobe Falls/North Campus (property owned by the university
north of Interstate 8). Because of the high cost of housing in San
Diego, offering an affordable, proximate housing option will help
SDSU recruit and retain outstanding faculty.
Over the next nine months, SDSU planners will seek
public input on the updated Campus Master Plan. An Environmental
Impact Report (EIR) for the project is currently underway and will
be available for public review in January 2005. A decision by the
California State University Board of Trustees is expected in July
2005.
The university will be hosting informational meetings
on the Campus Master Plan in November. For more information, visit
the Campus Master Plan Web site at www.sdsu.edu/masterplan.
San Diego State University is the oldest and largest
higher education institution in the San Diego region. Since it was
founded in 1897, the university has grown to offer bachelors
degrees in 81 areas, masters degrees in 72 areas and doctorates
in 14 areas. SDSU students participate in academic curriculum distinguished
by direct contact with faculty and an increasing international emphasis
that prepares them for a global future. For more information, visit
www.sdsu.edu.
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