On March 9th 2007 Western Michigan University
officially opened and dedicated the new James
W. and Lois I. Richmond Center for Visual Arts
(RCVA) to the public. Named
for philanthropists James and Lois Richmond,
this exciting new venue is a major cultural asset
for WMU, southwest Michigan, and the Midwest
region.
The RCVA was designed by the architecture/engineering firm SmithGroup,
Inc., of Detroit, Michigan. CSM Group of Kalamazoo
was the Construction Manager for the project.
The RCVA contains 44,000 square feet over three floors.
The first floor houses three galleries,
- the Albertine Monroe-Brown Gallery, for rotating exhibitions
- the Netzorg/Kerr Gallery, for special exhibits and showing
from the University Art Collection
- the Eleanor R. and Robert A. DeVries Student Art Gallery,
for student and alumni exhibitions
a multimedia classroom, and the Director of Exhibitions
office and exhibition workrooms. The second floor
houses the main offices for the Gwen Frostic
School of Art, a student study area and a large, tiered,
multimedia lecture room. The third floor is home
to the offices and studios for the Graphic Design
program.
Construction of the RCVA was phase one of a two-part effort to
relocate the School of Art from several old and
outdated locations on campus - Sangren Hall,
Knollwood Building, and East Hall.
Phase two was the renovation of the south bar
of Kohrman Hall, vacated by the College of Engineering
and Applied Sciences in 2003,
as classroom, office, and studio space. The two
buildings connect on the second floors.