President's Report Masthead
September 30, 2014
University breaks ground on smart energy facility

Jonathan Cohen
A rendering of the Smart Energy Research and Development Facility that will house the departments of chemistry and physics.

University breaks ground on smart energy facility

The start of construction on the Smart Energy Research and Development Facility is a milestone in the University’s history.

“This building will serve as a home for remarkable research that our faculty, graduate students and undergraduate students will conduct in the area of clean-energy production, utilization and efficiencies,” Binghamton University President Harvey Stenger said.

Stenger spoke at an Aug. 27 groundbreaking ceremony for the $70 million, 114,000-square-foot building at the Innovative Technologies Complex. He was joined by dignitaries including Lt. Gov. Robert Duffy, state Sen. Thomas Libous, state Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo and state Assemblyman Clifford Crouch. Many other campus leaders — including Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs and Provost Donald Nieman and Harpur College of Arts and Sciences Dean Anne McCall — and faculty members attended the festivities that concluded with an excavator making the “first dig.”

The Smart Energy Research and Development Facility is a result of the NYSUNY 2020 plan approved by Gov. Andrew Cuomo and the Legislature in 2012. NYSUNY 2020 allowed the University to implement a rational tuition program that enabled the campus to embark on a project for significant growth and to pursue a smart-energy research site.

The facility, scheduled for completion in 2017, will house the physics and chemistry departments. Research at the site will focus on alternative energy production, harvesting and storage in areas such as thin-film solar panel design and production, consumer-ready solar cells and next-generation battery production.

Besides its importance to the University, the facility will have a significant economic impact in the state and region.

Read more in Inside