Missouri State Opens Construction Education Success Center at Kemper Hall

Article Sponsored by:

CMiC Global

CMIC Global Logo

Since 1974, CMiC has been a global leader in enterprise software for the construction industry. Headquartered in Toronto, Canada, CMiC delivers a fully integrated platform that streamlines project management, financials, and field operations.

With a focus on innovation and customer success, CMiC empowers construction firms to enhance efficiency, improve collaboration, and make data-driven decisions. Trusted by industry leaders worldwide, CMiC continues to shape the future of construction technology.

Read More About CMiC: 

Kemper Hall addition housing the new construction training center with high-bay lab and scaffolding

Kemper Hall, Missouri State University, Springfield, Missouri, September 24, 2025

News Summary

Missouri State University will open a new Construction Education Success Center at Kemper Hall, a 10,000-square-foot addition and renovation for the School of Construction, Design and Project Management. Funded by the MoExcels Workforce Initiative and private gifts, the $9.6 million center expands hands-on construction training and connects students with local employers. The opening comes amid the university’s largest period of campus construction in decades — nearly $250 million in projects across campus — including major renovations and new facilities that are reshaping the campus landscape and academic capacity.

Missouri State Opens New Construction Education Success Center at Kemper Hall as Campus Undertakes Nearly $250 Million in Building Work

What happened first: A new Construction Education Success Center at Kemper Hall will be open to the public during a grand opening ceremony. The celebration is set for 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29. The event location: Kemper Hall, 921 S. John Q. Hammons Parkway, in the high-bay training lab.

Project basics

The center is a 10,000‑square‑foot addition and renovation to the university’s School of Construction, Design and Project Management. The project cost was $9.6 million. Funding for the project came through the MoExcels Workforce Initiative and private gifts. David Meinert, dean of the College of Business, said in a news release that This center positions Missouri State as a leader in preparing the next generation of construction professionals. Meinert also said in a news release that We’re committed to equipping our students with the skills employers need while driving regional economic growth. The industry‑focused space will expand access to specialized training within the construction management program. The renovation and addition included new features.

Campus construction in context

Missouri State is experiencing its most intense and expensive period of construction activity in decades. At one point there were 208 projects and the number had decreased to 194 projects. The university has almost $250 million worth of construction projects underway. The university has never seen this type of growth or this amount of construction in its history. Most construction work is spread across the main Springfield campus, with key, highly visible projects concentrated along Grand Street and National Avenue.

The university entered a hectic period of construction that will continue through next summer, with many main projects scheduled to wrap up in fall 2026. It’s going to be a much different campus. The campus experienced tree damage during recent wind events, and there were periods of heavy rain, but there has been minimal impact to construction project timelines. We plan on being able to make that up in the schedule. It’s common that we have to navigate these things. It’s been more uncommon this spring and summer but currently, there are no significant delays.

Major projects to watch

Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center is a $26.2 million project scheduled to open in fall 2026. The building is adjacent to the Davis‑Harrington Welcome Center and will house university advancement and the Missouri State University Foundation. Excavation is complete, the slab is ready to be poured, and steel erection will begin this fall. The project will continue heavily into next fall with the goal to have it done by Homecoming 2026. The project will become very visible on National Avenue this fall. Losing parking for the project will be worth the sacrifice and the building will be significant for the campus and alumni engagement. The advancement center will allow tours to begin at the welcome center and end at the advancement center to show students alumni impact.

The Judith Enyeart Reynolds Performing Arts Complex is moving forward after demolition of the Art Annex. The facility was made possible in part by the largest one‑time gift in university history. The state provided $17.5 million to support the project and an eight‑figure gift from the C.W. Titus Foundation was also part of funding for the project. The facility was designed to enhance arts, social sciences, and humanities education. As part of the project, the Grand Street entrance to campus will be transformed, including a plaza area that will greet visitors and improve the pedestrian/public perspective on that entry. The $96.4 million project includes constructing a 66,500‑square‑foot addition to the building formerly called Temple Hall and renovating the existing building. The scheduled completion date for that project is June 2026. Crews are on the doorstep of being substantially complete with the first phase, which is the addition on the mall side of the stadium. Some labs are fully functioning and the project is in the commissioning process; some people have already moved into the addition, and the addition will be fully open by fall 2025. The second phase, the significant renovation of the original building, will continue through next summer; essentially a year away from completing the renovation portion.

Renovation work tied to the performing arts complex is progressing but a fire related to a mechanical unit in early June is creating concerns. Originally classes were planned for Craig Hall in the fall, but the university is assessing the impact of the fire and replacement of damaged items. The fire was not related to the renovation work. There is a small addition planned to Craig Hall on the west side that will add a scene shop.

A $16.9 million project to renovate part of Cheek Hall was recently started to establish the Center for Transformational Education for Life, Physical, and Health Sciences. A construction fence has been established on the north side and the fence will remain essentially for the next year. The plan addresses deferred maintenance, improves facility functionality, and expands academic capacity in computer science, software development, and data science disciplines. About 43,400 square feet of space will be improved in the coming year as part of this work.

Other work and planning

There are numerous other ongoing projects of varying sizes across campus. At one point the university was in the middle of 182 projects worth $209 million plus nearly $17 million in consultant contracts. Major projects listed in the draft Facilities Master Plan include renovations to Cheek, Craig, and Kampeter halls; an expansion and renovation of Blunt Hall; and construction of the Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center and the Judith Enyeart Reynolds Complex.

Work to develop a new Facilities Master Plan started a year ago. The draft Facilities Master Plan is expected to be finalized this fall. The draft plan splits new projects into three categories: planned in the next five years, proposed in the following five to 10 years, and future potential projects 10–25 years away. The projects planned for the next five years are not yet fully funded; some have only crumbs of funding. Many of the planned projects are still at the pixels and paper stage. The university does not use the D word lightly but acknowledged there may be times buildings should be demolished.

The university wants to preserve and upgrade McDonald Hall and Arena; there is strong support on campus and in the community to keep it. McDonald Hall and Arena was built in 1940 with resources from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration. McDonald has good bones and is sort of built like a bomb shelter and is structurally very solid. There is a lot of traction in renovating McDonald, but no donor has yet been identified. The roof needs work to make it water‑tight and the HVAC system needs upgrading. McDonald currently houses classrooms, offices, fitness and recreation space, and has hosted academic programs including exercise science, physical education, sport and recreation administration, and kinesiology. Esports and studios for theatre and dance have also been located in McDonald. McDonald has been used as a staging area providing temporary offices for employees displaced during other campus renovation and construction. With many major projects set to finish by fall 2026, McDonald will become a clean slate, wide open, ready for whatever plans result. Many people in Springfield have fond memories of McDonald and appreciate its history.

Missouri State plans to relocate the Office of University Safety and the Springfield police substation from its current location off Cherry Street to University Hall. The existing building would be demolished to make way for additional parking. The move will place campus safety in a prime location. University Hall was purchased from the Church of Christ in 1993 and is located just west of the Davis‑Harrington Welcome Center and near the bookstore and Plaster Student Union. The reported average response time for the MSU substation is three minutes; centrally locating safety should improve response times.

There has been a significant amount of work at Plaster Stadium as part of the university’s move to Conference USA. Initial work included power‑washing, painting, new turf, and new lighting. Future upgrades will be needed, including looking at relocating the weight room and possibly adding different types of suites. Bleacher backs were being installed so MO State would appear on the upper bowl.

Karls Hall was built in 1957 and is home to the William H. Darr College of Agriculture and its agribusiness, agricultural education, and communications unit. Karls features an agriculture research and demonstration center, offices, classrooms, two auditoriums, and a rooftop greenhouse complex. Darr Ag is conducting its own mini master plan, and findings will be fed into the university’s broader facilities master plan. Karls desperately needs a renovation.

Meyer Library originally opened in 1980 and was renovated and expanded in 2002 to include the Jane A. Meyer Carillon. David Richards was recently named dean of Missouri State University Libraries and started in mid‑July. Richards previously worked at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and worked for Missouri State’s library system from 1997 through 2016. Richards replaced longtime dean Tom Peters, who retired. Dean Richards will review the needs of the library and develop a plan.

Budget and state construction context

The Missouri House Budget Committee approved almost $4 billion in construction funding on a Thursday. The funding included 45 new earmarked items for projects ranging from a county government maintenance shed to a capital city parking garage. About half of the spending is reauthorization of projects approved in past years and funded mainly from the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act. As of March 31, the state had $1.3 billion remaining to be spent from the $2.9 billion originally received from the federal COVID‑19 relief law. The new items increased general revenue spending for construction projects by $76 million more than requested by the governor. The construction budget was to be debated in the full House on Tuesday.

What to expect next

Many projects will continue through next summer and several major projects are scheduled to be substantially complete by fall 2026. The campus will look and function differently as new additions open and older buildings are renovated. Construction leaders say they are managing weather and other disruptions and currently see no significant delays.


Frequently Asked Questions

When is the grand opening for the Construction Education Success Center?

The celebration is set for 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29.

Where is the Construction Education Success Center located?

The event location: Kemper Hall, 921 S. John Q. Hammons Parkway, in the high-bay training lab.

How large is the Construction Education Success Center and how much did it cost?

The project is a 10,000‑square‑foot addition and renovation to the university’s School of Construction, Design and Project Management. The project cost was $9.6 million.

Who paid for the Construction Education Success Center?

Funding for the project came through the MoExcels Workforce Initiative and private gifts.

What will the new center do for students?

The industry‑focused space will expand access to specialized training within the construction management program.

How much construction is underway across campus?

The university has almost $250 million worth of construction projects underway.

What is the timeline for the larger projects?

The university entered a hectic period of construction that will continue through next summer, with many main projects scheduled to wrap up in fall 2026.

What is the status of the Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center?

The Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center is a $26.2 million project scheduled to open in fall 2026.

What is the status of the Judith Enyeart Reynolds Performing Arts Complex?

The $96.4 million project includes constructing a 66,500‑square‑foot addition to the building formerly called Temple Hall and renovating the existing building. The scheduled completion date for that project is June 2026.

{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “FAQPage”,
“mainEntity”: [
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “When is the grand opening for the Construction Education Success Center?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The celebration is set for 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “Where is the Construction Education Success Center located?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The event location: Kemper Hall, 921 S. John Q. Hammons Parkway, in the high-bay training lab.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How large is the Construction Education Success Center and how much did it cost?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The project is a 10,000‑square‑foot addition and renovation to the university’s School of Construction, Design and Project Management. The project cost was $9.6 million.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “Who paid for the Construction Education Success Center?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “Funding for the project came through the MoExcels Workforce Initiative and private gifts.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What will the new center do for students?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The industry‑focused space will expand access to specialized training within the construction management program.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “How much construction is underway across campus?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The university has almost $250 million worth of construction projects underway.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is the timeline for the larger projects?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The university entered a hectic period of construction that will continue through next summer, with many main projects scheduled to wrap up in fall 2026.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is the status of the Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The Clifton M. Smart III University Advancement Center is a $26.2 million project scheduled to open in fall 2026.”
}
},
{
“@type”: “Question”,
“name”: “What is the status of the Judith Enyeart Reynolds Performing Arts Complex?”,
“acceptedAnswer”: {
“@type”: “Answer”,
“text”: “The $96.4 million project includes constructing a 66,500‑square‑foot addition to the building formerly called Temple Hall and renovating the existing building. The scheduled completion date for that project is June 2026.”
}
}
]
}

Key features at a glance

Feature Detail
Grand opening 9 a.m. Monday, Sept. 29 at Kemper Hall, 921 S. John Q. Hammons Parkway, in the high-bay training lab
Center size 10,000‑square‑foot addition and renovation
Project cost $9.6 million
Funding MoExcels Workforce Initiative and private gifts
Campus construction total Almost $250 million worth of construction projects underway
Major timeline Many main projects scheduled to wrap up in fall 2026
Clifton M. Smart III Center $26.2 million; scheduled to open in fall 2026
Judith Enyeart Reynolds Complex $96.4 million; 66,500‑square‑foot addition; scheduled completion June 2026

Deeper Dive: News & Info About This Topic

Additional Resources

Construction TX News
Author: Construction TX News

TEXAS STAFF WRITER The TEXAS STAFF WRITER represents the experienced team at constructiontxnews.com, your go-to source for actionable local news and information in Texas and beyond. Specializing in "news you can use," we cover essential topics like product reviews for personal and business needs, local business directories, politics, real estate trends, neighborhood insights, and state news affecting the area—with deep expertise drawn from years of dedicated reporting and strong community input, including local press releases and business updates. We deliver top reporting on high-value events such as the Texas Construction Expo, major infrastructure unveilings, and advancements in construction technology showcases. Our coverage extends to key organizations like the Associated General Contractors of Texas and the Texas Building Branch, plus leading businesses in construction and real estate that power the local economy such as Austin Commercial and CMiC Global. As part of the broader network, including constructioncanews.com, constructionnynews.com, and constructionflnews.com, we provide comprehensive, credible insights into the dynamic construction landscape across multiple states.

Article Sponsored by:

CMiC Global

CMIC Global Logo

Since 1974, CMiC has been a global leader in enterprise software for the construction industry. Headquartered in Toronto, Canada, CMiC delivers a fully integrated platform that streamlines project management, financials, and field operations.

With a focus on innovation and customer success, CMiC empowers construction firms to enhance efficiency, improve collaboration, and make data-driven decisions. Trusted by industry leaders worldwide, CMiC continues to shape the future of construction technology.

Read More About CMiC: 

Stay Connected

More Updates

Would You Like To Add Your Business?

WordPress Ads