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Maurice J. Gallagher Jr. Hall Opens; New Home of ٺƵ Graduate School of Management

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Photo: Inside view of windowed foyer at the new Gallagher Hall, home to the Graduate School of Business
The campus is expected to be the first business school to achieve Gold Certification by the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in Environmental and Energy Design. This photo features the windowed foyer.

Applauding a symbol of the innovation and invention that has propelled California’s economy, prominent business leaders, faculty, students, staff and alumni today celebrated the grand opening of Maurice J. Gallagher Jr. Hall, the new home of ٺƵ’ Graduate School of Management.

Built to demanding environmental standards, the $16.2 million building is expected to raise the profile of the nationally ranked school while serving as an important new venue for business and academic conferences. It also becomes a highly visible addition to the campus’s emerging “front door” next to busy Interstate 80, which links Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay Area.

The building is named in honor of Maurice J. Gallagher Jr., a Las Vegas airline executive who contributed $10 million toward the project and an endowment for the school. The contribution from Gallagher and his wife, Marcia, is the largest gift the campus has ever received from one of its graduates. Gallagher earned his undergraduate degree in history from ٺƵ in 1971. He later received an MBA from UC Berkeley.

Adjoining Gallagher Hall is the new ٺƵ Conference Center, which includes spacious meeting facilities and offices for University Relations. The complex also will include a Hyatt Place hotel that is under construction and scheduled to open in March.

“This is truly an historic moment for the Graduate School of Management,” said Steven C. Currall, who became dean of the school in July. “With the opening of Gallagher Hall, our community finally has a world-class, state-of-the-art building that reflects the school’s world-class academics and our national and international reputation.”

ٺƵ Chancellor Linda Katehi called Gallagher Hall “a cornerstone of the vision for the campus’s new front door, a dynamic hub that will better connect ٺƵ’ world-class academic programs with the region, inviting the public to experience all the great work being done here.

“The Graduate School of Management’s business expertise, research excellence and can-do entrepreneurial spirit will help fuel our university’s engine of innovation and economic development in the region, the state, the nation and the world.”

When he announced his gift, Gallagher noted that the school already is ranked among the best MBA programs in the nation.

“The Graduate School of Management, since its inception in the 1980s, has always been focused on being a top performer,” Gallagher said today. “The addition of this facility will allow them to move to the next level.”

The new three-story building faces the Robert and Margrit Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts, located directly across Larry N. Vanderhoef Quad. The complex is part of a new campus gateway that includes the Robert Mondavi Institute for Wine and Food Science, a planned art museum, the ٺƵ Conference Center, the Hyatt Place at ٺƵ and the Walter A. Buehler Alumni and Visitors Center.

The quad and the encircling facilities are expected to become a central meeting point for business professionals, patrons of the arts, alumni and campus visitors.

“It’s exciting to see Gallagher Hall complete and to have it at the front door of the campus, so it’s visible for everybody who goes by ٺƵ on a daily basis,” said Barbara Hayes, executive director of the Sacramento Area Commerce and Trade Organization.

Hayes said her six-county organization will use Gallagher Hall in its efforts to attract new businesses to the region.

“Work force is the single largest factor influencing corporate site locations,” Hayes said. “When you talk about work force, you’re talking about among other things our education infrastructure in the region.”

At 40,000 gross square feet, Gallagher Hall represents a substantial expansion from the 25,000 gross square feet of space the Graduate School of Management previously occupied in a two-story building on the campus’s eastern edge.

The stone, glass and stucco building includes technologically advanced classrooms designed for interactive learning, expanded space for extracurricular activities, an upgraded and centralized student affairs and career services center, and outdoor garden and courtyard for informal gatherings and special events.

“We have been a great program with great professors and great students in an old, cramped building,” said second-year MBA student Sam Wainer. “Now our outward appearance matches the substance of who we are.”

With its pioneering, green-building design, Currall said Gallagher Hall also represents “a physical statement of the ethos of sustainability and social responsibility to which the Graduate School of Management is committed.”

The eco-friendly structure will reduce storm water runoff by 25 percent, with rainwater captured and treated on site. A white roof and light-colored paving will keep the building and its immediate surroundings cooler.

The landscaping, which uses native, drought-tolerant plants, is expected to cut potable water use by more than 50 percent. Other irrigation will rely on nonpotable, “utility” water. Inside the building, low-flow plumbing fixtures use 40 percent less water than the EPA baseline.

The building also is 30 percent more energy efficient than a typical office building, with tall windows that maximize natural daylight and motion-sensitive lighting controls in every room. In addition, 30 percent of the materials used in the project had been recycled and 75 percent of construction waste was recycled.

The commitment to environmental responsibility is expected to establish Gallagher Hall as the first building on the ٺƵ campus and the first business school in California to qualify for Gold standard certification by the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Environmental and Energy Design (LEED) program.

Maurice Gallagher is majority owner, president and CEO of Las Vegas-based Allegiant Travel Co., the parent company of Allegiant Air. He served on the ٺƵ Graduate School of Management’s advisory board in the early 1990s, has been a guest speaker in graduate business courses and was the school’s commencement keynote speaker in 2000.

Up to half of the $10 million is being used for enhancements, improvements, equipment and ongoing operational expenses for the new building. The balance established the Gallagher Fund for Excellence, an endowment to provide for the management schools’ highest priorities, including faculty and student support, and program expansion.

Many areas of the new building will be named for other generous donors. They include:

• A large tiered lecture hall named in honor of Ali Abbaszadeh, as a gift from his son, Reza Abbaszadeh, CEO of Sacramento-based Premier Access Insurance Company.

• Offices, classrooms and other spaces named for faculty and advisers of the school, or their family members, including Dean Currall and his wife, Cheyenne; former Dean Robert Smiley and his wife, JoAnn Cannon; Richard and Joy Dorf; Helen Singer Suran; Robert and Helga Medearis; the Agatstein family; Paul and Eva Griffin; Robert and Sandra Lorber; Roger Akers and his wife, Carole Waterman; Chih-Ling Tsai, Yu-Yen Tsai and Ching-Ju Liao; and Robert and Miriam Glock.

• The Innovation Lab, furnished with erasable whiteboard walls, named for Roger and Claudia Salquist.

• A central common hearth named for the Biggart family, as a gift from another former GSM dean, Nicole, and her husband, Jeff.

• Offices, conference rooms, a student lounge and other spaces named for ٺƵ alumni, including Michael and Renee Child; Gordon Hunt Jr.; Gary and Beth Brooks; the Greg Chabrier family; Mark and Marissa Schmidt; Pamela Marrone and Michael Rogers; Brian and Nancy Hartmeier; Bryan Chu, Christopher Lee, Oliver Demuth and Gregory Siegfried; and members of the classes of ’04 and ’05.

Other major donors included Kevin Bacon, Frank and Kim Washington and Hester Roofing of Sacramento.

About the Graduate School of Management

Established in 1981, the Graduate School of Management has enjoyed national prominence for more than a decade. It has been ranked among the top 50 public and private business schools by U.S. News & World Report for the past 14 years. It moved up to 40th place in the magazine’s latest survey.

The school has 120 students enrolled in a Daytime MBA program at Gallagher Hall and more than 450 Working Professional students at campuses in Sacramento and the San Francisco Bay Area.

About ٺƵ

For 100 years, ٺƵ has engaged in teaching, research and public service that matter to California and transform the world. Located close to the state capital, ٺƵ has 31,000 students, an annual research budget that exceeds $500 million, a comprehensive health system and 13 specialized research centers. The university offers interdisciplinary graduate study and more than 100 undergraduate majors in four colleges -- Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Biological Sciences, Engineering, and Letters and Science -- and advanced degrees from six professional schools -- Education, Law, Management, Medicine, Veterinary Medicine and the Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing.

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Tim Akin, Graduate School of Management, 530-752-7362, tmakin@ucdavis.edu

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