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For information about or to donate to the Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center, visit gbhb.byu.edu.
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A Front Gate to the University
Rising prominently on the western edge of the
bluff that holds central campus, the new Gordon
B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center will serve as
an eye-catching greeting—a front gate—to guests and
alumni entering the university on North and West
Campus Drives. BYU administrators hope visitors,
from prospective students and graduates to scholars
and government dignitaries, will find the building’s
purpose and architecture welcoming.
“It will be a gateway to the university,” says BYU
president Cecil O. Samuelson. “It will be a hallmark
building that will identify clearly what BYU means to
the kingdom and tell the history and story of BYU. It
will be a magnet for our alumni, our students, their
families, and our friends and visitors who will come
to our beautiful campus.”
Thousands of visitors and guests stream onto campus each year, with a significant jump in numbers since the 2002 Olympics gave BYU wide exposure. “BYU is in the limelight more than ever before,” says Carri P. Jenkins (BA ’83), assistant to the president for university communications. “More and more, we’re seeing scholars, government leaders, and international dignitaries putting BYU on their travel itineraries.”
Currently VIP guests are hosted at the former
president’s residence, which has charm but limited
facilities. Its location, tucked away on the southwest
corner of campus, is less than ideal. The new
Hinckley Building, just north of the Tanner Building,
will greet visitors at the main entry to campus, and
its facilities will accommodate both intimate and
large gatherings.
Alumni and visitors will attend functions in
three meeting rooms with movable walls that will
open up to create one large room accommodating
about 500 people. With
a dramatic wall of windows
looking out to the
western horizon, these
spaces will serve events
ranging from homecoming
reunions to ambassador
receptions.
The dual purposes of the building—to serve both alumni and visitors—will merge two complementary functions that previously were housed separately, says J. Craig McIlroy (BA ’78), the new president of the BYU Alumni Association. “It will enable us to not only welcome back all of our dear alumni friends, but also receive our guests who come from around the world to see the campus.”
BY THE NUMBERS ~
4,533 ~ 2005–06 incoming freshmen
3,048 ~ Visitors who participated in campus tours in 2005
2.2 million ~ Square feet of campus sidewalk
25 ~ Ambassadors who visit BYU in an average year
19 million ~ Google hits for “BYU”
A Place to Feel the BYU Experience
When completed, the Gordon B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center will include an area on the main floor for a small theater and exhibits to educate visitors on what BYU stands for and why it was established. Some displays will acquaint guests with the school’s sponsor, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and with BYU’s mission to deliver an education that integrates sacred and secular learning. Other exhibits will highlight the stories of BYU students, faculty, and alumni who have contributed to the world in significant ways.
“We see it being an honest-to-goodness visitors
center, much like those we have for visitors who come
to Temple Square or other temples. It will be a place
where people can learn about the Church and its
relationship with BYU and why BYU is different from
all other universities,” says Bruce L. Olsen (BS ’63),
director of Church public affairs and president-elect
of the BYU Alumni Association.
Specific plans are being developed, but Olsen
envisions interactive displays, a short film orienting
visitors to the university, and small kiosks that tell
BYU stories, such as Brigham Young commissioning
Karl G. Maeser to create Brigham Young Academy.
Currently, guests can read a typed narrative
describing BYU and its origins, but experiencing the
account in a multimedia format will “communicate
more powerfully the spirit of BYU,” says Olsen.
Working with BYU guests over several decades,
BYU Public Affairs and Guest Relations director
Ronald J. Clark (BA ’72) has watched visitors absorb
BYU’s story and has seen misconceptions laid to rest
and new ambassadors for BYU created. With the new
building and its exhibits, Clark believes people will
quickly grasp what BYU is all about: “When people
enter this building, they’ll feel what the wife of the
ambassador from Egypt felt when she visited BYU.
She said, ‘Your people live the principles of Islam.’
That was one of the highest compliments we could be
paid—to be likened unto their faith, which they hold
dear and sacred. After just a short time on campus,
they were very much aware that our students were
living by a higher law. The building will be more than
brick and mortar. People will be touched here.”
BY THE NUMBERS ~
34,067 ~ 2005–06 enrollment (including graduate and part-time students)
107 ~ Languages represented among students
46 ~ Religion courses offered at BYU
426 ~ Pianos on campus
25,875 ~ Largest Marriott Center crowd (for President Gordon B. Hinckley’s October 1995 devotional address)
A Campus Home for Alumni
Graduates of BYU typically open the door
of the Alumni House just twice in their entire
lives—when they pick up and return their caps and
gowns. Alumni leaders want this to change and are
hoping alumni and students will integrate the Gordon
B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center thoroughly
into their BYU experience.
Prospective students will find an introduction
to BYU in the exhibition area; new students will be
oriented in the large meeting room; current students
will host family and friends in the visitors center;
alumni will return for reunions, banquets, and other
university events.
“When young men and women enter BYU, they
begin forming a connection to the university that we
hope will build into a lifelong relationship,” says Lewis.
“As these students graduate and ‘go forth to serve,’
they become both contributors to the university and
alumni-ambassadors to the world. This building will
be a place where alumni can come home.”
The design includes a family-room space on the main floor—with a fireplace in one area and a two-story window looking west in another—where alumni can relax and reminisce. A business center and other rooms will accommodate visiting alumni who need to conduct meetings, send faxes, or plug in a laptop computer to check e-mail.
The upper floor of the building will include
office space for growing alumni programs. Since
the current building was erected 40 years ago, the
number of alumni has grown from about 50,000 to
some 350,000, and services are growing as well. The
Alumni Association’s offerings now include career
services, reunions, travel programs, parents weekend,
and more than 170 regional chapters around
the world. One of the more
recent innovations is affinity
groups, which bring together
alumni according to interest
rather than class year. The
new building will consolidate
alumni programs and services
physically, serving alumni
with greater efficiency.
“The current 40-year-old
building has been very good
to us, but we’ve outgrown it,”
says J. Michael Busenbark
(BA ’72), executive director
of the Alumni Association.
“With the new building, we’ll
be able to launch our programs locally and worldwide
much better and accommodate our alumni in a
much better fashion than we can now.”
BY THE NUMBERS ~
349,213 ~ BYU alumni
234,361 ~ Alumni with degrees
111 ~ Countries where alumni live
165 ~ Replenishment grants awarded to students by the Alumni Association in 2005
9,900 ~ BYU degrees awarded each year
A Tribute to President Gordon B. Hinckley
As an ambassador of The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints for nearly 70 years, Gordon
B. Hinckley has embodied openness, understanding,
and love for the Savior. His gift for reaching out to
the world was first noticed in the mid-1930s, when he
was called by then–Church president Heber J. Grant
to organize the Church’s public affairs program. He
directed that program for 20 years.
During his decade as the 15th President of the
Church, President Hinckley has traveled the world
many times, engaged the media to boost awareness
of the Church, and repeatedly urged Latter-day
Saints to embrace people of all faiths, ethnicities, and
nationalities.
“Just as Gordon B. Hinckley has reached out to
people in the four corners of the earth, the Gordon
B. Hinckley Alumni and Visitors Center will receive
people from all quarters,” says K. Fred Skousen (BS
’65), BYU advancement vice president. “They will be
welcomed here, introduced or reconnected to BYU
here, taught something of the restored gospel of Jesus
Christ and the eternal importance of education here,
and befriended here.”
Skousen has been impressed with how beloved
President Hinckley is, as evidenced by people’s eagerness
to contribute to the new building. As of early
April, more than 30,000 had already donated.
“President Hinckley is so self-effacing that he
would never seek this kind of honor. I view it personally
as a chance of a
lifetime for us to leave
a legacy on this campus
in his honor,” says
Skousen.
Carr C. Krueger
(BS ’85), the 2004–06
president of the Alumni
Association, says, “We
are so fortunate to be
part of the leadership
group that will see the
reality of the hopes and
dreams of so many past
alumni leaders. What
makes it even sweeter
is that this facility will
stand in honor of our
beloved prophet, emphasizing his legacy of outreach
and his invitation for the entire world to hear the
good news of the gospel.”
BY THE NUMBERS ~
92 ~ Temples dedicated by President Hinckley in his years of church service
25 ~ Years in the First Presidency
45 ~ Years on the BYU board of trustees
8 ~ BYU buildings dedicated by President Hinckley
250,000+ ~ Miles he has traveled in church service