Taylor’s vision for significant investment extends beyond the campus and includes their local community. Earlier this year, Taylor received a $250,000 community planning grant that allowed the University to bring together local leaders and conduct a strategic planning process to identify areas of economic growth for Upland. This study led to the Main Street Mile Initiative, a transformational economic plan for the development of the one-mile stretch between Taylor’s campus and downtown Upland. The planning process served as a catalyst for the University to apply for additional grant money and identify private investors from its alumni and parent base, as well as community members and friends of the University.
These investments are complemented by Indiana’s $18 million Upland streetscape project which includes a repaved Main Street, wider sidewalks, improved curbs, and new streetlights contributing to a welcoming aesthetic for the downtown area.
Indiana Secretary of Commerce, David Rosenburg, visited Taylor’s campus earlier this month as a judge for the University’s annual Shark Tank competition event. “I’m thrilled to see Taylor University continue to build upon its legacy as a top-notch academic institution in the state committed to making positive change,” said Sec. Rosenberg. “Taylor is thriving and is well-equipped to lead the charge for economic growth and development in Upland, not just by enhancing its own campus, but also by investing in key areas of its community.”
Counter to trends of diminishing enrollment around the country, Taylor, the oldest non- denominational university in the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU), has welcomed back-to-back record-breaking freshmen classes and leads Indiana in the recruitment of traditional, undergraduate, freshman for Christian colleges. The University is on track to break another enrollment record next fall when it welcomes its 2024 freshman cohort. During this period of historic growth, the University’s Senior Leadership and Board of Trustees recognized the strategic opportunity to review Taylor’s building and infrastructure needs alongside Taylor Thrives to ensure facilities would serve the campus well now and into the future and support the expanding student body.
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The $100+ million in planned campus investments is allocated towards five core areas: academic buildings, dining facilities, residence life, hospitality, and co-curricular investments. Significant projects include:
A recent nearly $2 million grant from the Don Wood Foundation has provided funding for enhancing Taylor’s engineering facilities. The University renovated the Rupp Communications Arts Center last summer and has plans to renovate the Reade Liberal Arts Center.
“These are exciting times of growth and investment,” said President Michael Lindsay. “We are working hard to make the Taylor campus more beautiful, engaging, and an inspiring place where our students can thrive. From new academic spaces to residence halls, to co-curricular investments, we want this campus and our local community, which students call home, to be a great place of flourishing.”