1780 – The Official Blog of Transylvania University

1780 | The Official Blog of Transylvania University

Transylvania expands Rafskeller to accommodate Campus Center construction

Transylvania University has expanded its Rafskeller Grill area to accommodate campus dining needs during the construction of a new, $29.6 million Campus Center. The renovated dining space, which opened this week as students returned for the beginning of winter term, provides more seating than the previous facility in Forrer Hall. The 60-year-old residence hall will make way for the new Campus Center. When this new building opens in the fall of 2020, it will include Transy’s main dining facility—the Great Hall—which will seat up to 450 and remain open 24/7 as a place for students to gather. It also will feature a cafe and outdoor terrace seating. Until then, the campus community will use the expanded Rafskeller area. (The name is a nod to an eccentric professor, Constantine Samuel Rafinesque, and a play on a German word for a type of basement eatery: Ratskeller.) Seating in this space, located in the Mitchell Fine Arts Center, includes rooms with themes that students chose—including Lexington Culture, Fourth Street Stuff and the Rafeteria. To further accommodate the change in campus dining, Jazzman’s Cafe will add more grab-and-go options; two pop-up restaurants will be set up each week at various locations around campus; and, for dining outside on nice days, outdoor seating will remain in Alumni Plaza over winter.

Transylvania’s $29.6 million Campus Center project underway

A low silt fence between Transylvania University’s Forrer Hall and North Broadway is a small sign of big changes to come. Installed at the beginning of winter break, the fence will stop soil runoff as crews take down the 60-year-old residence hall to make way for a new $29.6 million Campus Center, which will feature event spaces, dining facilities, exercise rooms and more.  Demolition of Forrer is scheduled to begin Dec. 28 and take two months to complete. Also part of the project will be renovations to the existing William T. Young Campus Center, most of which will remain open until next summer—when everything except the pool will close. The new Campus Center is expected to open by fall of 2020. Until then, the university will make accommodations to ease the transition. “We understand this will be a change for people, and we want to make it as pleasant as possible,” said Marc Mathews, vice president for finance and business. Because Transy’s main dining hall was in Forrer, the Rafskeller will be expanded with three additional dining rooms by the time students return Jan. 7. This will provide more seating than the previous dining hall offered. Also, Jazzman’s Cafe will add more grab and go options; two pop-up restaurants will be set up each week at various locations around campus; and outdoor seating will remain in Alumni Plaza over winter. “So if we have a nice day in February, you