NC State fundraising campaign comes to an extraordinary end
Story Date: 1/20/2022

 

Source: NCSU, 1/18/22


North Carolina State University has raised more than $2.1 billion for scholarships, faculty support, facilities and programs through its five-year Think and Do the Extraordinary Campaign, officials announced today.

The Campaign, which came to a close Dec. 31, 2021, was by far the largest in the university’s history. Only 12 other public universities in the United States have closed fundraising campaigns at the $2 billion or higher level.

The grand total of $2,103,932,120 will help drive NC State’s land-grant mission of creating economic, societal and intellectual prosperity for all by both reaffirming its commitment to broad educational opportunity and powering its cutting-edge, hands-on innovation as North Carolina’s leading science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) university.

Chancellor Randy Woodson said the Campaign’s campuswide success provides a strong foundation as NC State launches a new strategic plan. Every college and unit surpassed its fundraising goal.

“The Think and Do the Extraordinary Campaign has vividly illustrated the strength of our Pack and sets us up for a big, bold future,” Woodson said. “Through the generosity of our friends and alumni, we can now provide our students and faculty with the tools they need to learn, grow and succeed like never before. People all across North Carolina and beyond will benefit as a result.”

NC State has always been supported in large part by public funding through the state of North Carolina, but when the Campaign launched publicly in October 2016, university leaders emphasized that private support is critical in advancing a good institution to a great one. 

The response was record-setting for NC State. In all, more than 128,000 donors from around the world contributed to the effort, including 67,751 alumni — 29,759 of whom donated to the university for the first time.

The Campaign’s impact has been tremendous across its five priority areas of opportunity, purpose, places, experience and leadership.

Commitments made during the Campaign to create more than 1,300 new scholarships and fellowships have already had an immediate impact on NC State. There were 104 new endowed distinguished professorships established during the Campaign, each aimed at helping NC State recruit and retain talented educators and researchers. The university’s first three named, endowed college dean’s chairs also were among many highlights impacting faculty.

Wilson College of Textiles joined Poole College of Management as NC State’s second named college.

Improving and expanding infrastructure was another focus. For example, Fitts-Woolard Hall, representing the largest campus-building naming in university history, opened for College of Engineering use in the summer of 2020 and was officially dedicated Oct. 29, 2021.

Nearby on Centennial Campus, the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences-led Plant Sciences Building, a dynamic new structure that will enable the college to seamlessly integrate research and innovation with its partners, is scheduled to open this spring. Both facilities also were supported through a successful statewide bond referendum.

A number of older facilities received attention, too. The Memorial Belltower, NC State’s iconic landmark honoring alumni who died while serving in World War I, was rededicated as the Memorial Belltower at Henry Square — renovated, restored and, after 100 years, completed with a full complement of 55 bells.

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