Menu
Posted April 11, 2016

Ball State dedicates Hunt Center for construction management

New learning center will prepare students for careers in construction management. 


As the nation’s construction industry becomes more complex, with highly skilled managers are in short supply, Ball State in Muncie, Indiana, has created a center to prepare its students for the rapidly expanding field.

The university dedicated the technologically advanced and student-centered Robert G. Hunt Center for Construction Management during a ceremony Thursday within the recently renovated Applied Technology Building.

The 2,500-square-foot facility, which simulates the office environment found at major construction management organizations, is designed to foster teamwork, said James Jones, a construction management professor.

“Now more than ever, students must work collaboratively as part of highly complex teams,” Jones said. “Our students are learning the skills needed to become proficient managers who can guide multimillion-dollar projects from concept to completion on time and within budget.

“This center will play a critical role as they learn how to work with professionals from various parts of an organization to make sure that all needs are addressed,” he said. “Construction management is undergoing many changes based on team interaction. In fact, you can’t build anything bigger than a doghouse without a group of top level professionals.”

The facility’s primary use will be for the program’s capstone course, which focuses on students working in four-member teams on a construction project. Each team will have its own physical office space for the duration of the course.

Students will have around-the-clock access to the center to work on assignments.

Jones noted the facility’s layout is based on current collaborative spaces at Hunt Construction Group offices in Indianapolis and other cities around the nation.

Honoring a leader in innovation

The center’s name honors the program’s strongest supporters, Diane and Robert G. Hunt, ’69. He is a national a leader in innovation and excellence in the construction industry.

Hunt has been an executive-in-residence for two immersive learning projects at Ball State: the first, in 2010, focused on redesigning a transportation hub in Venice, Italy, and the second, in 2012, had students evaluate Hunt Construction Group's brand image and develop a strategic brand image management plan.

He is the third generation in his family to head Hunt Construction Group as its chairman and chief executive officer. The nationally ranked construction firm regularly hires Ball State graduates and is widely recognized as the one of the country's premier builders of sports facilities and convention centers.

Jones noted that Hunt’s presence will be felt in the new center, with several multicolored light shades over a conference table representing his penchant for wearing bright ties. The shades were created by students at Ball State’s Marilyn K. Glick Center for Glass.

“Mr. Hunt will always be with us in the building, overlooking our work,” Jones said. “We just have to look up.”

Filling a need

Employment for construction managers is projected to grow 5 percent annually from 2014 to 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. In addition to expected industry growth, there will be a need to fill a growing number of vacancies due to baby boomers retiring.

Ball State’s program had a 100 percent placement rate in 2015, with recent graduates starting at an average salary of $53,000.

Ben Lamb, ’11, who spoke during the dedication ceremony, credits Ball State’s construction management program with providing a strong education and internship experiences that helped him get hired by Hunt Group shortly after graduation. He is a scheduling engineer for the firms’ project support center in Indianapolis.

“The faculty at Ball State are among the best in the nation because of their construction industry backgrounds,” he said. “One of my profs told us, ‘All of us professors are here to give you the tools in your toolbox in order for you to go build whatever it is you desire to build.’ ”

Lamb believes the new center will provide students with a space that is similar to a real world scenario.

“When I was a student, I would have thoroughly enjoyed this as a place to work together on group projects or even spend an evening doing homework,” he said.

Click here to learn more about the program. 

SPONSORED ADS