March 13, 2007
CUA Hosts Ceremonial
Groundbreaking for Opus Hall
Donor, CUA Trustees, D.C. Officials Gather for Ceremony
|
|
|
Bishop
William E. Lori, chairman of CUA’s Board of
Trustees (left) with Neil and Becky Rauenhorst and Father O’Connell. |
With a front-end loader and a cluster of CUA flags
as a backdrop, Catholic University held a ceremonial groundbreaking March 12
for Opus Hall — an approximately $25 million residential facility that will
blend state-of-the-art amenities with a “collegiate Gothic” architectural
design.
Very Rev. David M. O’Connell, C.M., university president, noted in his remarks
at the event, which was held at the construction site on CUA’s
main campus, that the “groundbreaking for Opus Hall is another chapter in what
is an ongoing story of alumni giving back to alma mater so that the lives of future generations of students
might be better.”
(To view a video of the ceremony, click on http://digitalmedia.cua.edu//events/video/asx_dsp.cfm?event=3547&stream=3846.)
To view more photos of the groundbreaking, click on http://galleries.cua.edu.
The seven-story residential facility, which is slated for completion by
2009, will be located in the northeast corner of the CUA campus on the west
side of
The design of Opus Hall, which will house
about 400 students, includes a striking central tower and two flanking wings.
Students who attended the event sported navy blue T-shirts with an image of the
tower and the words “Rising to
Following his remarks, Father O’Connell introduced Neil J. Rauenhorst, a 1976 graduate of the university’s
|
|
|
D.C. Council member Harry Thomas Jr. (Ward 5) with
Father O’Connell. |
The name Opus Hall recognizes a $3 million gift for the building project
from Rauenhorst, his wife, Becky, and the Opus Group.
Opus East, LLC is the contractor for the design and construction of the
building.
“When I see the potential for growth and development on this campus to
make
In addition to Rauenhorst, special guests at
the ceremony included Bishop William E. Lori, chairman of CUA’s
trustees; six other university trustees; Opus East executives as well as
several D.C. government officials and local community leaders.
The ceremony held special significance for Harry Thomas Jr., D.C.
Council member who represents Ward 5, which includes Brookland, where
Thomas, who grew up in the Brookland neighborhood, said “I’ve watched
“
|
|
|
Father O’Connell,
the Rauenhorsts and CUA
students. |
Toward the end of the ceremony, Father O’Connell, other CUA
administrators and the guests donned hard hats and dug shovels into a sandpit
set up for the occasion at the construction site.
Opus Hall, which will be located near other residence halls as well as
the Eugene I. Kane Student Health and
The new residence hall will qualify for
certification as a “green” (environmentally friendly) facility because of such
things as its energy-efficient appliances and heating and cooling systems. The
building will have expansive gathering spaces, which will further reinforce the
strong sense of community that attracts students to CUA.
MEDIA: For more
information about Opus Hall, contact Katie Lee or Chris Harrison in the Office
of Public Affairs at 202-319-5600.
***
The Catholic University of
America,
an institution of higher learning in
Opus East,
L.L.C. is headquartered in
Rockville, Md., with an office near Philadelphia and another in Stamford, Conn.,
and is one of five regional companies within The Opus Group. Opus East has
developed more than 13 million square feet since starting in 1994 and currently
has 5 million
square feet in planning or under development. The Opus Group, based in
—30—
#103
Any questions or comments? cua-public-affairs@cua.edu
![]()
Revised: 3/14/2007
All contents copyright © 2007.
The
Office of Public Affairs.