The state budget signed Thursday by Gov. Ralph Northam includes funding for Virginia Commonwealth University to construct a $121 million 168,000-square-foot, six-floor building dedicated to science, technology, engineering and math education on the Monroe Park Campus.

The building, which will house lab, classroom and office space for the College of Humanities and Sciences, will be built at the site of the Franklin Street Gym, which is slated for demolition starting in spring 2020.

“The new STEM facility will provide a state-of-the-art learning, research and collaboration space in a location that is in the heart of the student community,” said VCU President Michael Rao, Ph.D. “I am grateful to the General Assembly for their support. Their funding of the project speaks to their belief in VCU’s educational mission and the commonwealth’s goal to become the best-educated state by 2030.”

The building will expand existing lab space, facilitate innovative and flexible teaching methods, provide students with instructional and study spaces, and free up space in other College of Humanities and Sciences buildings to better serve students and faculty.

It will include 34 teaching labs; the Math Exchange, an innovative facility for math instruction; a Science Learning Center; two large-capacity classrooms; computer labs; and large- and small-capacity flexible classrooms. It will feature instructional wet and dry labs and classrooms for teaching chemistry, biology, physics, math, psychology and kinesiology.

“The new building will help enhance the academic success of our students by providing the laboratories where students can put to practice the knowledge acquired during the lectures,” said Montse Fuentes, Ph.D., dean of the College of Humanities and Sciences. “This space is essential to provide experiential learning opportunities to our students, facilitate both innovative and flexible teaching methods, and provide students with both instructional and study space that will prepare them to become indispensable to our society.”

The building will provide easy and immediate access to STEM courses and labs, and will help students in the College of Humanities and Sciences reduce the time needed to fulfill degree requirements, thereby also reducing student debt incurred, Fuentes said.

The state’s investment in the new STEM building will benefit VCU, its students and faculty, and the local and state economy, she said.

The College of Humanities and Sciences annually awards more than 1,500 degrees in STEM disciplines — including biology, chemistry, forensic science, mathematical science, physics, science, chemical biology, medical physics, applied physics, nanoscience and nanotechnology, rehabilitation and movement science, systems modeling and analysis, geographic information systems, psychology and statistics.

More than 15,000 students take STEM classes annually in the College of Humanities and Sciences.

The STEM building will be located at the site of the Franklin Street Gym. Credit: Ballinger/Quinn Evans Architects.

Lab usage on campus exceeded 80 percent of optimal usage, according to data as of October 2018. Introductory biology labs saw 129 percent of optimal usage, while physics labs saw 120 percent lab usage and introductory chemistry and organic chemistry saw 116 percent.

By adding lab and classroom space, the STEM building will make it easier for College of Humanities and Sciences students to get the required courses and labs for their majors, thereby reducing attrition and improving the number of STEM graduates.

Nationally, STEM jobs earn an average salary of $87,570, nearly double the average U.S. salary, and the field is projected to grow at a rate of 18.7 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. To keep up with projected growth demand, the U.S. will need an additional 1 million more college graduates with STEM training.

In Virginia, 7.6 percent of the workforce is science and engineering workers, and there has been a 9.5 percent increase in STEM employment over the past decade – outpacing 2.5 percent growth in non-STEM jobs. Of VCU’s STEM graduates, 76.5 percent live in Virginia, as of October 2018.

“The College of Humanities and Sciences is grateful to our legislature for the support to bring this laboratory space essential for us to train our students for success and provide the state of Virginia with a well-trained workforce,” Fuentes said. “An investment in the education of our students is an investment in Virginia’s economic progression.”

The building will be designed by Ballinger and Quinn Evans Architects and constructed by Hourigan.

According to Quinn Evans, the large, contemporary science building will be designed to complement the historic context of Franklin Street.

“This project is imagined to be a ‘centerpiece for the Monroe Park Campus’ as it will be the center for the College of Humanities and Sciences,” the company said. “It will give the college breathing room in its laboratory utilization while also creating a 21st-century learning environment that will serve the majority of undergraduate students on campus. The college is the university’s launching pad for students aspiring to enroll in graduate health sciences programs. This building will provide VCU with the facilities that it needs to attract, retain and educate tomorrow’s science, math and health care leaders.”