To the moon, Doris
February 21, 2007
Students living in the residence halls will have a different view from their windows starting spring 2007.
The construction of a Science and Space Center was the focus of a press conference with U.S. Rep. Doris Matsui of California on Nov. 30 at Sacramento Hall.
The center will be located on the walkway that runs from the dormitories to the main campus. It is part of “Destination 2010,” – Sacramento State President Alexander Gonzalez’s plan to transform the university from a commuter college to a flagship university.
Matsui described the projected designs of the building and the benefits that it would bring to Sac State and the surrounding areas.
The new building will contain an observatory with solar and astronomical telescopes, high-volume lab servers, a planetarium and a hands-on science exploration center for Sac State students and students from the community.
“I am very excited to see the initial concepts for Sacramento State’s new Science and Space Center and planetarium,” Matsui said. “They demonstrate the energizing directions Sacramento State is going in and its commitment to education.”
Matsui also told how she and her late husband, Rep. Robert Matsui, helped to get $1.5 million for the project, $950,000 of which was granted from the House of Representatives a few weeks ago.
Chien Yuan Hu, a former Sac State physics professor, willed a portion of his endowment toward the center after his death in 2002.
In Hu’s memory, a large Foucault pendulum will be displayed in the front part of the building. According to the Smithsonian Institute Web site, the Foucault pendulum demonstrates the Earth’s rotation by using laboratorial methods rather than astronomical observations.
Royal Vanderberg, a physics and astronomy professor, also left $200,000 to Sac State for a planetarium fund.
The Science and Space Center was originally projected at $8 million, but at the press conference, the cost had risen to $10 million. According to Angel Barajas, the Associated Students Inc. president, students will not have to pay for the center through their tuition fees.
Marion O’Leary, the dean of the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics, said the reason for the $2 million increase is due to the Science and Space Center “being a larger project than originally thought.”
He also commented that until the design is completely finished and construction is set to begin, the cost would not be definite.
O’Leary and Randy Phelps, a professor of the Astronomy and Physics Department, came up with the idea of a new space center four years ago.
“Our goal is to teach students astronomy and to get them interested in other types of sciences,” Phelps said. “The Science and Space Center will entice students to come to Sac State.”
The estimated start of construction for the Science and Space Center is spring of 2007, according to O’Leary.
The center will be to the west of Shasta Hall and an entry plaza will face the residential halls.
O’Leary said one of the problems that the design team of the center is working on is the path from the residential halls to the campus. As the design is arranged now, students walking from the dormitories would have to walk around the center to get to classes.
This problem will be solved by the time that construction begins in early 2007.
“This is a wonderful idea,” said Kelly Larsen, a senior liberal studies major. “It will be good for the community and for the school. It will also bring in younger students to our campus.”
Jamie Gonzales can be reached at [email protected].