Their college has a short history -- three years of classes, five graduates -- but for students and faculty at Minneapolis' tiny Vesper College, the mission is long-lasting, ecology- inspired architecture and permanent changes in art education.
The 18 students currently enrolled are pursuing two-year, teaching-focused MFAs in ecological architecture. That won't make them registered architects, but it will help them become teachers aware of where science, design and construction meet.
"Eco-architecture isn't a degree you can get just anywhere," said Steven Schmidgall, assistant professor at Vesper and construction administrator at BWBR Architects in St. Paul.
Schmidgall calls Vesper students pioneers: "The students are taking a little bit of a risk in taking part in a startup program like that. It's a unique program that needs to match up with unique students, with a set of skills and personalities that you don't just meet on the streets."
Recent weeks have marked a flurry of public exposure for the college and its students. The college gallery opened a monthlong juried show with guest artists. Seven Vesper students debuted a one-night artistic architecture exhibit at Art of This, the first such group showing beyond the college's gallery walls. And this weekend, student Kari Donlan opens her master of fine arts show at the college gallery.
Classes resume Sept. 9 in the college's "gentrified" 106-year-old building, which once housed Minneapolis' telephone operations and now stands as a symbol of college President Dan Noyes' vision of sustainability.
The building "has been around for 100 years -- you scrape it off, do a little cleaning and now it's ready for another 100 years," he said. "You just feel the warmth around you. You are in the earth because of the materiality around you."
The two floors of classroom and gallery space blend together, as marked by stones, sticks, ropes and metal wires and sheets that stand, branch, connect and hang from the walls and student workbenches.