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Next Major Facility Upgrade: Eddy Music Center

“The project reflects the growth of our music program. … We need more space for teaching, practice and instrumental storage, as well as comfortable areas for people to meet and relax.” — Michael Selmon

A stroll through the Eddy Music Center typically finds percussionists practicing in hallways, instruments jammed in practice rooms, and generally cramped conditions.

Increasing numbers of students are participating in the various ensembles. The number of performers in the Kiltie Marching Band, for example, has increased from 73 in 2004 to an all-time high of 102 this fall. The continued popularity of the Choirs, Percussion Ensemble and other performance groups also contributes to the overcrowding.

The Music Department has outgrown Eddy. As a result, Eddy is getting a facelift.



The Kiltie Marching Band has grown from 73 to 102 over the last five years.

The Board of Trustees earlier this month approved planning for extensive renovations to Eddy plus the construction of a 5,000-square-foot building addition. The $1.8 million project will be funded by a combination of gifts and a portion of the proceeds from last year’s sale of tax-exempt bonds. A $1 million fund-raising goal has been set.

“The project reflects the growth of our music program, both vocal and instrumental,” says Provost Michael Selmon. “We need more space for teaching, practice and instrumental storage, as well as comfortable areas for people to meet and relax.

“We have approved an initial footprint; our hope is to approve the final design and start work immediately after commencement next April,” he says.

The College is working with the architectural firm TCI in the project design. The anticipated nine-month project could be completed by Christmas 2010.

Renovations to the existing 10,000-square-foot Eddy Music Center will include moving interior walls to transform small practice rooms into larger studios, adding offices, and removing instruments from the large rehearsal space so that ensembles can practice more comfortably.

The new addition, to be built between Eddy and the Swanson Academic Center, will contain several practice rooms, a new recording studio, faculty offices, instrumental storage space, and a highly visible front lobby with a rounded glass front facing northwest into McIntyre Mall. The proposed lobby will be large enough for hosting receptions and greeting campus visitors.

The new facility will not connect to SAC but will leave an opening. However, it will be planned so that a second floor could be added, designed at a height to allow for a connection to the SAC at the second-story level.

As part of the project, Kimball Court, the garden area located along the walkway between Eddy and SAC, will be moved to a new and more visible area off the new facility’s front entrance along McIntyre Mall.

“I anticipate that this part of McIntyre Mall increasingly will be a center of campus life,” says Selmon. “We will have the beautiful entrance to the new Hogan at the end of the mall, with the more visible Kimball garden and the new music facility with attractive lobby entrance. I can foresee the possibility of outdoor concerts on the mall in that general area.”

The Eddy Music Center, constructed in 1974-75, was the first campus building to be devoted exclusively to the teaching of music. Funds for the original construction were made available from the estate of Mrs. Sara Eddy of Flint, and the building is named in her honor.

Kimball Court is named in honor of Dr. John R. Kimball, who served Alma from 1959 to 1974 as director of admissions, dean of students, vice president for administrative services and professor of education.

 

 

Alma College's teacher preparation program has received an "exemplary" rating following a comprehensive review by the Michigan Department of Education.

 

Student Profile

Kwon JinJu

Kwon JinJu
Graduation: 2008
Major: Advertising and Public Relations
From: Seoul, South Korea
Interests: Dance, Nature, Travel

Alma has had lasting relationships with colleges and universities in South Korea, with the Korean international students completing one full year of study at Alma. Here at Alma, the international students make lifelong friendships and leave everlasting impacts on our students and on the surrounding communities.