How do you turn a 20th-century engine research lab into 21st-century University of Minnesota mechanical engineering teaching space? You relocate most of the engines, recycle the fuel drums, untangle the hoses and wires, scrub away the grime — and you've only started. A ceiling-level maze of exposed wiring, heating, and plumbing pipes has to go. The circa-1940 single-pane windows need replacement. So do circuit breaker boxes so antiquated that replacement parts are available only on eBay.
How do you do all that? With $34.6 million, or about a third of the $100 million in state general obligation bond financing needed systemwide for building repairs and renovation, the university's Board of Regents told Gov. Mark Dayton and the Legislature in October.
Adding $100 million to the renovation fund known in Capitolese as HEAPR (that's "higher education asset preservation and replacement") tops the university's request list this year. The same is true for its sister system, Minnesota State Colleges and Universities, which is making a $130 million HEAPR request.
Dayton registered his response last week. His proposed bonding bill includes $40 million for HEAPR at each system.
By past bonding bill standards, that's a typical HEAPR helping. Compared with today's needs on Minnesota's public campuses, it's not enough. Not enough to do the Mechanical Engineering Building renovation — not when it's one of 71 projects on the university's HEAPR list. Not enough to catch up after a dozen years of bonding parsimony at the Capitol. Not enough to satisfy Minnesota's ambition to make its public higher-education systems magnets for talent from around the world.
That's not just maroon-and-gold boosterism. It's also the studied conclusion of ISES Corp., a Georgia-based facilities consultant that recently assessed the cost to maintain at current functionality the 29 million square feet that comprise University of Minnesota campuses. The number ISES derived: $160 million per year. In the past five years, the state and university together have been investing $110 million per year.
The university isn't alone in this predicament. Perennially deferred maintenance is a misery-loves-company lament on most public campuses in this country. Another collegiate facilities consultant, Connecticut-based Sightlines, said in a 2013 report that the nation's colleges are "at a unique point in the history of managing facilities." Buildings constructed to educate baby boomers 50 years ago now require significant renovation to remain useful. That bill is coming due just as state and federal funding spigots are tightening and governing boards are growing wary about debt.
"The traditional strategy of cyclical building renovations and replacements will not work for the future," the report's executive summary predicts. "There is just too much work to be done."