Nebraska
Kiewit Hall opens, optimized to prepare generations of engineers
The University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s Kiewit Hall is redefining how traditional academic spaces help prepare students for career success.
Opening for the spring semester Jan. 22, the six-story, privately funded, $115 million building is the university’s academic hub for engineering education. It connects five engineering facilities and is home to the construction management program. It offers a mix of multi-purpose classrooms, instructional labs, engineering student services, maker spaces for student organizations and a large outdoor plaza.
Lance C. Pérez, dean of engineering, said everything about the design of the 182,000-square-foot building has been purposeful.
“Make no mistake, Kiewit Hall is very much an academic building — but some of the design elements reflect the fact that engineering is a professional career,” said Lance C. Pérez, dean of the College of Engineering. “We wanted it to reflect what our students will experience when they graduate, and what corporations and engineering firms are expecting of their employees.”
Featuring state-of-the-art technologies, classroom spaces in Kiewit Hall are specially designed for the unique demands of engineering instruction.
“It is well known that the traditional lecture style of teaching is not effective for most engineering courses,” Pérez said. “We wanted to design classrooms that supported evidence- based pedagogies that over the past 20 years have been shown to increase student learning outcomes in engineering classes. That was a very deliberate decision.”
More than 15 classrooms are designed with flexibility in mind. The furniture, including the teacher’s location, can be arranged for custom learning environments and to better facilitate group work and collaboration.
The walls, for the most part, are glass from floor to ceiling. This serves many purposes, including promoting the work of engineers.
“Very few people really know what engineers do, and what they do really is important and cool,” Pérez said. “It impacts every person every day. We should be proud of that and proud to put it on display and celebrate it. This building helps us do that.”
It is also expected to further the college’s recent work to improving teaching and learning practices. That work includes the launch of the college’s Complete Engineer program, which bolsters students’ technical foundation with essential professional and personal skills.
“There are structural changes to the foundation of our teaching that we’re hoping are going to stick,” said Tareq Daher, director of the college’s engineering and computer education core. “Combine that under the umbrella of what we envision the Complete Engineer of the future looking like — that development is possible because of Kiewit Hall.”
The building also offers “The Garage,” an informally named space on the first floor and lower level that will serve as homebase for the college’s registered student organizations. It includes offices; collaboration and study spaces; maker spaces that included equipment for woodworking, machining and welding; a computer numerical control machine; 3D printer; and a crane to hoist heavy items such as the engines built by the college’s SAE Baja and Formula SAE teams.
Pérez envisions a design space where a larger sense of community can be developed by bringing together students from across campus.
“When we talk about ‘The Garage,’ I’m hoping that eventually we will have capstone design projects that include students from business, journalism, architecture and all disciplines at this university,” Pérez said. “What this building is going to facilitate is that kind of interaction that replicates how our engineering students are going to be working when they are out in industry.”
Other key elements of Kiewit Hall include:
- 15,000 square feet of public event space and a café with healthy menu options on the main floor;
- flexible learning spaces, with six classrooms with capacity ranges from 60 to 150 students on the second floor;
- new space for the college’s Lincoln-based construction management program on the fourth floor, and Engineering Student Services, the college’s academic and career support unit, on the fifth floor;
- a dean’s suite, including the College of Engineering External Advisory Board Room and an exterior terrace, on the sixth floor; and
- an exterior quad featuring a greenspace bordered by Abel and Sandoz residence halls.
The support of the corporations and firms who hire Nebraska Engineering graduates is also noticeable throughout Kiewit Hall. That support included a $25 million naming gift from Kiewit Corporation, an Omaha-based construction firm with offices worldwide, among numerous donors.
“The new Kiewit Hall is a perfect example of the University of Nebraska’s vision to compete with the best institutions in the country,” said Chris Kabourek, interim president of the University of Nebraska system. “I’m grateful to Dean Pérez for his leadership and to Kiewit and all our donors for making this remarkable facility a reality. Kiewit Hall will allow us to create even more opportunities for students to start their dreams right here in Nebraska.”
Kiewit Hall is the centerpiece of the college’s $190 million facilities investment, which began in 2019 and continues with ongoing renovations to Scott Engineering Center. In 2022, the college opened the 87,000-square-foot Engineering Research Center, with more than 50 state-of-the-art research labs and graduate student offices.
Kiewit Hall is also helping the college meet the demands of record undergraduate enrollment — which surpassed 3,400 in fall 2023. College leaders plan to grow enrollment to 5,000 students by 2030.
“Kiewit Hall will benefit generations of UNL students and strengthen the already impressive impacts of Nebraska Engineering,” Chancellor Rodney D. Bennett said. “This world-class facility will allow us to recruit and graduate additional students who are ready to go to work for Nebraska and beyond. I am grateful for the generous donors and partners, as well as Dean Pérez and the team who made this grand vision a reality.
“This project reflects the grand potential and incredible future that exists here at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln when we align on a big idea.”
Ultimately, Perez said, the mission of the College of Engineering and its unique Complete Engineer program is to prepare and train qualified professionals and leaders for Nebraska and the nation.
“Engineering is a team-based sport now. So, the idea of locking yourself in an office behind a closed door, that’s just not how engineering is,” Pérez said. “Corporations have realized that and have changed their workplace. Whether it’s Kiewit or Olsson or Garmin or Boeing or any employer, their environments have been adapted to what the profession demands.
“For Kiewit Hall, we borrowed the sum of those design elements, because we know it’s the start of a cultural change for the college. Combined with the Complete Engineer® program, it is going to facilitate our development of the next generations of leaders who are cognizant of the ways they can impact people and the world.”
Nebraska
Fire marshal investigating fatal house fire in southeast Nebraska
DAWSON, Neb. (KOLN) – One person is dead after a house fire in the village of Dawson on Saturday.
The Richardson County Sheriff’s Office was called to a structure fire near Riley Avenue and Fifth Street at 12:31 a.m. According to the sheriff’s office, 70-year-old Michael Leroy Ruch was found dead in a bedroom in the northwest corner of the house.
The cause of the fire is still under investigation by the Nebraska State Fire Marshal.
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Nebraska
First UNMC Kearney medical class to be awarded scholarships
The Health Science Education Center II at the Douglas A. Kristensen Rural Health Education Complex at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. University of Nebraska at Kearney, Courtesy)
KEARNEY — The University of Nebraska Medical Center will offer scholarships to the first class of medical students to study and train in Kearney, a key initiative aimed at strengthening access to health care in rural Nebraska.
The Health Science Education Center II will open to its first class of medical students in fall 2026, and for the first time, UNMC will educate future physicians in rural Nebraska.
The new scholarships will cover at least half the cost of medical school tuition for all four years for the first class of students in Kearney. The scholarships have been made possible by generous benefactors and the UNMC College of Medicine. No state money has been used to create the scholarships.
“Improving the health of people across Nebraska is a major goal of UNMC and the College of Medicine,” said Bradley Britigan, MD, dean of the UNMC College of Medicine and Stokes-Shackleford Professor in the Department of Internal Medicine. “We are excited about our first cohort of medical students beginning at Kearney later this year, which is one more example of that commitment. And we are pleased, with the help of other generous donors, to be able to offer this support.”
Currently, 66 of Nebraska’s 93 counties are designated as medically underserved areas. Studies have shown students may be more likely to choose to practice in smaller communities after graduation if they are trained in rural communities.
Robert Messbarger, MD, inaugural associate dean for the UNMC College of Medicine’s regional medical school campus in Kearney, said the scholarships are indicative of the support the UNMC College of Medicine has received since it announced plans to have medical students at Kearney.
“I am grateful to these benefactors, and the college, for this wonderful effort,” Dr. Messbarger said.
With additional private support, the UNMC College of Medicine would like to extend the scholarships to subsequent classes of UNMC medical students in Kearney. Matching funds are available to support the new scholarships.
“We hope to be able to provide even more financial aid and to be able to extend these scholarships to future classes,” Dr. Britigan said. “However, additional philanthropic support will be needed to do so.”
Donors who commit a scholarship gift of $50,000 or more will have their gift matched by one-third by the College of Medicine. For example, a gift of $75,000 would be matched by the College of Medicine, with an additional $25,000 for students studying in Kearney.
Scholarships are a priority of Only in Nebraska: A Campaign for Our University’s Future, a historic effort to raise $3 billion from 150,000 unique benefactors to support the University of Nebraska.
Donors interested in learning more about the new scholarships may contact Brian Anderson, senior director of development for the College of Medicine at the University of Nebraska Foundation, at brian.anderson@nufoundation.org.
Nebraska
No. 16 Florida State baseball outclassed by Nebraska, drops two of three in Arlington
No. 16 Florida State (4-2) struggled mightily in its final game in the Amegy Bank College Baseball Series, falling to Nebraska 10-1 with only two hits.
Almost nothing went FSU’s way on Sunday as Link Jarrett received only one out from his starter, Payton Manca, the offense continued to sputter, and the defense lacked the savviness the head coach expects. Today was an example of what the worst version of Seminole baseball could look like this year: an unproven team that lacks high-end talent struggling against veteran rosters that punish mistakes.
The Noles immediately fell behind the eight-ball in the top of the first, as Payton Manca recorded only one out in his second start of the week while allowing three earned runs. After Chris Knier settled the game down with a 1-2-3 second, the Cornhuskers tacked on two more in the third, putting Florida State behind 5-0.
Jarrett’s team did not record a hit the first time through the lineup and had only one baserunner, Noah Sheffield, who was hit by a pitch. Myles Bailey finally put FSU in the hit column and on the board in the bottom of the fourth as he blasted his second home run of the year to left-center, but the homer did not provide the spark FSU hoped it would, as the HR was Florida State’s only extra-base hit of the game.
The only silver lining from Sunday’s finale in Texas was the season debut of Trey Beard. Beard fell ill last weekend and was scratched from his start. Jarrett said on Saturday he would be available in some capacity today, and the FAU transfer entered the game in the fourth. The lefty needed just eight pitches to retire Nebraska in order before posting a strikeout as part of a 1-2-3 top half of the fifth. Unfortunately, his outing came apart in the sixth as NU tagged him for three runs and chased him after 2 1/3 IP out of the bullpen, but his struggle may have come from fatigue. Beard provided enough positives to see why the coaching staff was so high on him, mainly his ability to use multiple secondary pitches, including the devastating changeup.
Trailing 8-1 in the bottom of the sixth, the top of the FSU lineup, Brayden Dowd, Sheffield, and Bailey each struck out as the awful day at the plate continued. Nebraska pushed out in front 10-1 in the seventh and locked the game down by allowing only one hit in the latter innings. Florida State fell 10-1 on Sunday and will have multiple questions to answer heading into a season-long nine-game homestand.
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