Boris Sapozhnikov/RIT
The more than $25 million expansion almost doubles the size of RIT’s business college, adding more than 35,000 square feet.
Education today is changing, and Saunders College of Business wants to stay ahead of the curve in its effort to enhance educational opportunities for its students.
The college completed more than $25 million of upgrades and renovations to Max Lowenthal Hall. Designed by LaBella Associates, the space nearly doubled the size of RIT’s business college, adding more than 35,000 square feet.
Transformational gifts from E. Philip Saunders, the college’s namesake, along with other Saunders College alumni and friends and a New York state grant, provided the funding to make it all possible.
According to Saunders Dean Jacqueline Mozrall, the mission of this expansion revolved around three key components.
The first was to be able to enhance interdisciplinary interactions between students and faculty members. Second was to expand community engagement locally and worldwide. The third was to elevate the learning environment with respect to formal learning as well as research.
New classrooms, the fourth-floor Susan R. Holiday Center, the first-floor Gueldenpfennig Auditorium, applied research and case analysis labs, and outdoor spaces provide room for the college to host career fairs and networking receptions and lectures.
“Having the event spaces allows us to bring in distinguished speakers from business and industry that students get to interact with. They may even end up working at some of these companies,” Mozrall said. “We never would have been able to host some of these events before, but now we have the ability to bring in more people to Saunders College to interface with our students.”
Students such as Dhwani Doshi, a business analytics master’s degree student and graduate student liaison, considers Max Lowenthal Hall her second home. She frequently uses the Sklarsky Center for Business Analytics and new team spaces.
“The new building has a very modern vibe to it, which suits the college as it’s pushing more to innovation, and tech and digital transformation,” Doshi said. “I like when there is alignment in your mission and in the space that you’ve created.”