History

In 1987, the Anchorage Community College merged with the University of Alaska Anchorage.The UAA Community & Technical College (CTC) was formed in 1996 through the merger of the College of Career and Vocational Education and the College of Community and Continuing Education. The history below appeared in the Sept. 30, 2013 edition of Green & Gold News.

CTC's History as the Anchorage Community College

Alaska was still a territory in 1915 when the United States Congress set aside federal lands near Fairbanks for a land-grant college. In 1917, Alaska’s territorial legislature approved a statute establishing the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines which opened in 1922. In 1935, the institution was renamed the University of Alaska.

Today, there are three universities and one community college in the state system: University of Alaska Southeast, University of Alaska Fairbanks, and the University of Alaska Anchorage, and Prince William Sound Community College. UAA is the largest university in the system and includes three community campuses: Kenai Peninsula College, Matanuska-Susitna College, and Kodiak College. Prince William Sound reports to the UA system through the UAA Chancellor.

The University of Alaska first offered classes in Anchorage in 1950 at Fort Richardson. Anchorage Community College (ACC), a joint venture of the Anchorage Independent School District and the University of Alaska, opened in 1954 in the second floor of what is now West High School. Five years later, Alaska became the 49th state in the union. ACC became a unit of the University of Alaska in 1962. Construction began in 1968 on a new ACC campus in the Goose Lake area, now known as the U-Med District.

The original community college campus took form in 1971 when four buildings were completed around a rectangular maintained green space. These included Eugene Short Hall, Sally Monserud Hall, Beatrice McDonald Hall, and Gordon Hartlieb Hall. Each of these buildings is still in use today. In 1972 the Lucy Cuddy Center was built, which provided a place for the community college students to eat, gather, and also learn about the hospitality industry.

The University of Alaska, Anchorage (UA,A) was created in 1971 to contain Anchorage Community College and the newly formed Anchorage Senior College. The Consortium Library was the first building constructed to the east of the community college campus and the Chester Creek greenbelt and was shared by the two universities in the U-Med District: The University of Alaska, Anchorage (Anchorage Community College and Anchorage Senior College), and Alaska Methodist University (a private institution). By 1974 the Anchorage Senior College building (now referred to as the Social Sciences building) was added and connected physically to the Consortium Library.

UA,A meanwhile added Buildings K and J (now referred to as the Professional Studies and the Auto/Diesel Technology) to the community college campus in 1973. In 1975, an addition to the Professional Studies Building was constructed as a Performing Arts Space (now referred to as the Wendy Williamson Auditorium and Memorial Lecture Hall). Towards the latter part of the 1970s UA,A added the Sports Center and Campus Center buildings which began to enrich student life.

In 1977 the Science Building was added which expanded the UA,A campus to two buildings. By the start of the 1980s the UA,A campus began to expand rapidly. First came Engineering, then the Administration and Humanities buildings (now referred to as the Administration Building), and student housing was built and occupied by 1985.

The advent of student housing marked a significant change to the campus atmosphere. Until then, all had students had commuted. The Fine Arts building was the last facility to be constructed in the 1980s. In 1987 the Regents merged the former UA,A, Anchorage Community College, Kenai Peninsula College, Kodiak Community College, and Mat-Su Community College into a single entity: the new University of Alaska Anchorage (UAA).

In the 1990s new construction on the Anchorage campus consisted of the Business Education building, student housing, and the Central Garage. The Business and Education building, now known as Rasmuson Hall, was the first new building built on the former community college campus. This building is also the western starting point for the enclosed elevated walkway referred to commonly as the “Spine.” The elevated walkway was not entirely enclosed until 2002, providing full weather protection. Today the Spine includes informal student gathering spaces, study areas, and extends from the Business Education building to the Consortium Library. Other buildings include the addition to the Consortium Library and the Ecosystems Biomedical Laboratory (EBL).

Significant new construction on the Anchorage campus since the year 2000 includes the Alaska Native Science and Engineering Program (ANSEP) building, the ConocoPhillips Integrated Sciences building and adjacent parking garage, and a new Health Science building on recently acquired land on the south side of Providence Drive. A new undeveloped parcel has also been acquired at the southeast corner of Providence Drive and Lake Otis Parkway. Currently under construction is the Alaska Airlines Center, and a new Engineering Building.

Other off-campus additions have been made to the UAA real estate holdings in the past 30 years: the Aviation Building at Merrill Field, the 7th and A Street Building in downtown Anchorage, the University Center, and the Bragaw Office Complex. All of these buildings provide teaching, research, and learning spaces for the university.

UAA’s Anchorage campus has evolved in the last 43 years from its beginnings as a community college to a full scale university that competes on a national level in academics, research, and athletics. It also provides a unique experience to students as a university in a major sub-Arctic city.

NOTE TO READERS: This history is excerpted from the new UAA 2013 Campus Master Plan (PDF), with background and assistance from UAA History Professor Emeritus Will Jacobs. The history section begins on Page 82 of the 90-page report.