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crescent_center_for_arts_and_neuroscience_ccan [2023/05/15 13:57] bant05crescent_center_for_arts_and_neuroscience_ccan [2024/09/12 16:02] (current) bant05
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 ====== Crescent Center for Arts and Neuroscience ====== ====== Crescent Center for Arts and Neuroscience ======
  
-[{{:ccan_2022.jpg?350 |CCAN. Photo CreditJeff Liszka}}]+[{{:02-3.jpg?300 |The building's original design. Photo creditPayette Construction}}]
  
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-Officially dedicated on October19, 2018, The Center, or CCAN, is an 11,000-square-foot space on the south end of campus that opened in fall 2017, hosting classes, research, collaboration, and exhibition of creative works. +Officially dedicated on October 19, 2018, the Center for Arts and Neuroscience, or CCAN, is an 11,000-square-foot space on the south end of campus that opened in Fall 2017. Originally intended to be a bookstore and cafeCCAN was redesigned and repurposed to become an academic building. The building hosts classes, research, collaboration, and the exhibition of creative works. 
  
 +[{{ :ccan_2022.jpg?350|CCAN, August 2022. Photo credit: Jeff Liszka}}]
  
 CCAN is the home of the interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program, which integrates biology, chemistry, philosophy, engineering, and psychology. CCAN’s Arts Creativity Corridor features a student art gallery with a high, open ceiling; flexible track lighting; and uninterrupted white walls. Students played a key role in designing the building’s Student Common space by participating in one of three planning committees to create a comfortable environment that would accommodate socializing and studying with friends. CCAN is the home of the interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program, which integrates biology, chemistry, philosophy, engineering, and psychology. CCAN’s Arts Creativity Corridor features a student art gallery with a high, open ceiling; flexible track lighting; and uninterrupted white walls. Students played a key role in designing the building’s Student Common space by participating in one of three planning committees to create a comfortable environment that would accommodate socializing and studying with friends.
  
-[{{ :ccan_2022_2.jpg?350|CCAN. Photo Credit: Jeff Liszka}}] +Key donors for CCAN included Alexander Levi ’67 (for whom the Neurosciene Wing is named) and Victory Levi; John Robson ’70; and foundation partners: the Edward C. and Ann T. Roberts Foundation, the William and Alice Mortensen Foundation, and the Maximilian E. & Marion O. Hoffman Foundation.
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-Key donors for CCAN includedAlexander Levi ’67 (for whom the Neurosciene Wing is named) and Victory Levi; John Robson ’70; and foundation partners: the Edward C. and Ann T. Roberts Foundation, the William and Alice Mortensen Foundation, and the Maximilian E. & Marion O. Hoffman Foundation.+
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 ===== Sources ===== ===== Sources =====
  
-[[https://www.trincoll.edu/donors-recognized-at-the-crescent-center-for-arts-and-neuroscience/|Donors Recognized at the Crescent Center for Art and Neuroscience]]+[[https://www.trincoll.edu/donors-recognized-at-the-crescent-center-for-arts-and-neuroscience/|Donors Recognized at the Crescent Center for Art and Neuroscience]], 2018.
  
-[[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/reporter/425/|Trinity Reporter]] (Winter 2018), pp. 4.+[[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/reporter/425/|Trinity Reporter]] (Winter 2018), p. 4.
  
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crescent_center_for_arts_and_neuroscience_ccan.1684159047.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/05/15 13:57 by bant05