Gov. Jim Doyle, University of Wisconsin Oshkosh administrators, UW Oshkosh Foundation board members and major donors broke ground Oct. 16 at the site of what will be the University’s first new academic building since 1971.
The public is welcome to join Gov. Jim Doyle, University leaders, Oshkosh Student Association officers, major donors and members of the campus community in support of what will be one of the Midwest’s most distinctive and environmentally friendly academic centers.
The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh’s continuing commitment to sustainability will transform northeastern Wisconsin when construction begins on what will be the most environmentally friendly and efficient building of its kind in the state.
The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh campus community will thank the individuals, organizations and businesses throughout the region who generously donated to the UW Oshkosh Foundation’s first capital campaign during the groundbreaking for the University’s first academic building since 1971.
The transformation of a former Cub Foods building to the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh’s Campus Services Center, 650 Witzel Ave., concluded with a ribbon-cutting ceremony Sept. 15.
An abandoned “big box” building in Oshkosh has undergone a major renovation that has converted it into a state-of-the-art Campus Services Center for the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh’s facilities management operations and postal and document services.
The Oshkosh Plan Commission unanimously approved a 175,000-square-foot academic building that represents UW Oshkosh’s first new academic space in 38 years. Read more at thenorthwestern.com.
The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh’s first new free-standing academic building since 1971 received unanimous approval from the State Building Commission (SBC), keeping the building on schedule for late summer construction.
A Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) has been developed for the New Academic Building on the UW Oshkosh campus.
The University of Wisconsin Oshkosh will play a major role in transforming northeastern Wisconsin, as construction begins on one of the Midwest’s most distinctive academic buildings, the University’s first since 1971.