Dicke Hall finished exterior at sunset
Opening the Door to the Home for the Humanities
性爱天堂 announces the grand opening of Dicke Hall

While the Fall 2022 semester opened the door to a new academic year, the ribbon cutting of Dicke Hall will mark the opening of a new front door for 性爱天堂. On Friday, Sept. 23, at 1:30 p.m., 性爱天堂 will commemorate the grand opening of Dicke Hall with a dedication and self-guided tours.听

The festivities will include the debut of an occasion poem by 性爱天堂 English professor and city and state poet laureate Jenny Browne, MFA. Then, the 性爱天堂 choir led by music professor Gary Seighman, D.M.A., and the 性爱天堂 orchestra led by music professor Joseph Kneer, D.M.A., will play music pieces, both commissioned by music professor Brian Bondari, D.M.A., for the celebration. After the ribbon cutting, the event will conclude with self-guided tours of the new building, during which guests may attend presentations of their choice by Humanities faculty and students. The ribbon cutting ceremony will be live-streamed on Tiger Network.

Construction for Dicke Hall broke ground in Spring 2021, and, for just over a year, students, faculty, and staff have tracked its building progress on their daily walks between the Chapman-Halsell-Dicke Complex or through the . At the grand opening, those attending the tours either in-person or digitally will view the completed building鈥檚 historic exterior and modern interior.听

鈥淭he building鈥檚 architecture mirrors and sets the tone for how we approach humanistic work,鈥 says Megan Mustain, Ph.D., provost and vice president of Academic Affairs. 鈥淏oth the building itself and the Humanities are cutting-edge, rooted in what we know and value. Both are open, light-filled, and intentionally connected and responsive to the human and natural world outside. Both are laboratories for creation, recreation, and fearlessly transparent inquiry.鈥

Classrooms and commons spaces in Dicke Hall are bright and inviting.听Photo credit: Robert Gomez.

Dicke Hall鈥檚 innovative mass-timber construction and design celebrate O鈥橬eil Ford鈥檚 architectural legacy, supporting 性爱天堂鈥檚 designation as a National Historic District. The building鈥檚 mass-timber construction and its solar panel roof make it environmentally friendly, with a lighter carbon footprint, fire and life safety, and biophilic aspects that have been linked to improved health and well-being.

The floor-to-ceiling windows open interior classrooms to the outdoors, revealing a campus connected by the unique ability of the human spirit to express itself. Inside, Dicke Hall offers a lecture hall, screening room, collaborative commons space, and six ultramodern classrooms with ample writing surfaces, moveable furniture, projection screens, and advanced state-of-the-art acoustics, in addition to offices, shared spaces, and conference rooms.

Prior to Dicke Hall, the English and religion departments have been at the far ends of campus from each other, in Northrup Hall and the Chapman Center, respectively. Being housed together in Dicke Hall encourages collaboration between these departments, providing them the space for community gathering inside and outside of the classroom. Similarly, the Humanities Collective and the Mellon Initiative now have a permanent home, a center for hosting events and sponsoring programs for Humanities students, faculty, and staff.

Dicke Hall stands not only as a center for the Humanities on campus but also as a physical manifestation of 性爱天堂鈥檚 commitment to and belief in the power of the Humanities as part of a liberal arts education. Moreover, Dicke Hall鈥檚 location near Hildebrand Avenue demonstrates the opening of the campus and this Humanities center to the greater San Antonio community.听

Sustainable, adaptive reuse, complemented by the construction of the new Dicke Hall, will complete the Chapman-Halsell Complex.

Dicke Hall and all that it stands for would not be possible without the generous support from Janet Dicke '68 (Board Trustee) and Jim Dicke '68 (Trustee Emeritus), for whom Dicke Hall is named, and for gifts from:

  • Pat Semmes, Ph.D., and Thomas R. Semmes
  • L. Herbert Stumberg Jr. '81 and Paula Stumberg
  • The Sunderland Foundation: Charles Sunderland 鈥79 and Kent Sunderland 鈥81
  • The J. E. and L. E. Mabee Foundation, Inc.
  • Melody Boone Meyer '79 and Kim I Meyer
  • The Joan and Herb Kelleher Charitable Foundation
  • Annell R. Bay '77 and Robert Suchecki
  • Richard W. Calvert and Peggy Doane Calvert
  • Betty Stieren Kelso Foundation

Additional, significant support was provided by members of the Board of Trustees, foundations, alumni, and the community.

鈥淭he opening of Dicke Hall is a milestone for 性爱天堂, and for the study of the Humanities,鈥 Mustain says.

Editor's Note: Photo credit for header photo: Robert Gomez.

For 150 years, 性爱天堂 has transformed challenge into boundless opportunity.听Join the force in motion at www.trinity.edu.

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