January 14, 2025
by Susan Gawlowicz
A new chapter at RIT began in fall 2023 with the completion of a multi-use building that captures the university’s identity
The Big Shot Project Team/RIT
RIT photographers made this long-exposure image of the SHED at sunset in September as part of the 36th Big Shot event. Students and community volunteers provided the light sources for this College of Art and Design signature tradition.
Early on in his tenure, RIT President David Munson saw the need to showcase the way RIT students play with technology, the arts, and design.
The resulting Student Hall for Exploration and Development (SHED) creates four levels of making, performing, and active-learning spaces for a new generation of RIT students, who balance academics with hobbies and passion projects.
The SHED complex covers 209,000 gross-square feet of combined new construction and an extensive renovation of Wallace Library. The $120 million complex represents RIT’s biggest capital project since the campus moved to Henrietta, N.Y., from downtown Rochester in 1968.
Munson took inspiration from the spirit of the Imagine RIT: Creativity and Innovation Festival. The annual spring event displays student projects and talent to the wider community and draws approximately 30,000 visitors.
The SHED channels the Imagine vibe every day and gives prospective students a glimpse of what they can explore at RIT. The SHED is big enough to hold several makerspaces, a music and dance studio, performing arts ensemble studio, 185-seat glass box theater, rehearsal rooms, a recording studio, and extra-large classrooms that inspire active learning and student engagement.
The glass-and-steel edifice is a contrast from RIT’s predominantly brick architecture. William Rawn & Associates designed the new building with layers of interior glass walls and a 98-foot atrium to flood the space with natural light.
“It’s been remarkable to see how students claimed this new facility as their own from day one,” said Tiffany Brodner, SHED executive director. “This space has quickly become a place where students not only innovate and collaborate but also feel a sense of belonging. It is more than just a building—it’s a community where they feel empowered to explore.”