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SUNY-IT in Utica and Albany's nanoscale campus set to merge

Ryan Delaney
/
WRVO
Construction of the Nano Utica complex on the campus of SUNY-IT in Utica in October.

New York's public university system is merging two of its campuses. SUNY's polytechnic college will merge will its nano-technology school in 2015.

The merger comes after the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering broke off of the University at Albany last year. CNSE has been the darling of SUNY system since its creation in 2004. Though small, it’s attracted millions in private investment.

Starting next year, CNSE will be a combined college with SUNY’s Information and Technology campus in Utica. The five-decade old polytechnic and engineering school is undergoing its own expansion to host computer chip fabrication. It has about 3,000 students. The College of Nanoscale serves another 300.

The partnership between the two has been growing for years, said SUNY-IT interim president Robert Geer.

"You’re really having two growing institutions that had been working together, partnering together for years. And it’s really a culmination. It’s a really natural step," he said after the SUNY trustees vote.

For now, the new college will be known as the SUNY Institute of Nanoscale Science, Engineering and Technology, but Geer says that's a working title.

The nano school’s chief, Dr. Alain Kaloyeros, will oversee the campuses, which will continue to operate from their current sites.

"What it’s going to do is provide the students of New York state with an affordable version of MIT; it will be New York’s MIT," Geer said. "And that is, a technological institute focused on cutting edge science and technology, but is really open to everyone and utilizing a tremendous infrastructure across the state."

"The State University of New York is doing many things to meet the country’s desperate need for STEM" - science, technology, engineering and math - "education. Making this new college campus, in my opinion: monumental," said trustee Eunice Lewin

The faculty union at SUNY, United University Professions, expressed some concern over the merger, saying the schools could lose their academic focus.

WRVO/Central New York reporter for the Innovation Trail
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