Students, Alumni Laying Foundation for DU’s Future
Pioneers past and present have a hand in constructing the new residential village and community commons
When the ý knocked down Driscoll North, Joanne Cho (BSBA ’16, MSC ’19) was just about in tears.
“I had a personal connection to that building,” says Cho, who as an undergrad worked inside as a reservations administrator. “It was a bittersweet goodbye, although I never really liked the old, outdated blue tile in there.”
But every day at work, when she puts on a fluorescent yellow vest and a hard hat, Cho is reminded of how sweet the future will be. As a project engineer at Saunders Construction, Cho (who recently left the company to pursue another opportunity) is just one of several DU alumni and current students who quite literally have a hand in building the new and Dimond Family Residential Village for first-year students.
“Looking at the prints, I remember how excited I was when I was told I was on the Community Commons project,” Cho says. “It was very personal to me because I was longing for that [space], not only as a current student but as an alum and now a working professional.”
The two buildings, located adjacent to Sturm Hall, are cornerstones of the ý Advantage Campus Framework Plan, grown out of the Both will open in fall 2020.
The Dimond Family Residential Village will house 500 first-year students in a pod system, created to foster several layers of community and create a greater sense of belonging and connection.The Community Commons is designed as a hub to bring faculty, students, staff and community members together. Its halls will feature spaces for classes, programming, studying and meeting, as well as a central dining hall. A rooftop venue with views of the mountains and campus is Teena Bergstrand’s favorite feature.