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Institute of Technology
Inventing Tomorrow

FROM THE DEAN

Realizing our dreams

Walter Library's renovation creates a feast for the eye and opens the door to the future

If you've ever undertaken a home remodeling project, you know how wonderful it feels to apply that final coat of paint, sweep away the debris, and arrange the furnishings just so. Best of all, you invite your family and friends over to share your pleasure and admire the results of your hard work.

That's just how my colleagues and I feel right now. We've recently moved back to Walter Library, which has undergone an amazing transformation over the past two and a half years. On paper, the scope of the building's $63.4 million renovation was impressive; in person, it's extraordinary.

Walter Library offers the best of both worlds: a state-of-the-art, high-tech facility that's also a feast for the eye. Floor to ceiling, it's rich in architectural details, color, and textures that create a warm, welcoming environment in which to work or study. Those of you who remember the old Walter Library will be amazed at the beauty that lay dormant under layers of paint and grime.

Gone is the old stack core; in its place are modern classrooms, offices, laboratories, and research facilities. After years of planning, the Digital Technology Center (DTC) is now a reality. Under director Andrew Odlyzko, the interdisciplinary center will work to advance the University—and Minnesota—as a national leader in digital and information technology.

Our faculty and students are delighted with the new Science and Engineering Library facilities, which include a completely refurbished stack area and magnificent second-floor reference room. The library offers over 1,000 electronic resources, digital scanning services, and high-speed Internet access for laptops (wireless access will be added soon). The library staff is also creating a state-of-the-art digital library that will feature many new plug-and-play technologies.

The people of Minnesota can expect a great return on their investment in the DTC and in education. But we must continue to develop our strengths and to invest in critical areas. That's why your support for the University's 2002 capital funding request—$239.8 million over the next two years—is so crucial. The request includes $3 million for designing a teaching and technology center for IT that will allow us to increase the number of students enrolled in technically demanding and high-growth programs.

The new building will also enable us to begin a series of renovations that will provide expanded, modern teaching and research facilities for physics and astronomy, geology and geophysics, and computer science and engineering. For more information, see www.umn.edu/urelate/request. Walter Library—a wonderful instruction and research facility for the 21st century—is proof that dreams do come true. In this issue you can read about the renovation and take a visual tour. Better yet, come to campus and see it for yourself. You'll be so proud of what we've accomplished together.

H. Ted Davis
Regents Professor and Dean