The world is awash with data, and the University of Virginia’s School of Data Science will help sort it.
UVA dignitaries, including President Jim Ryan, Vice Rector Robert Hardie and Data Science Dean Philip Bourne, donned hardhats and pitched ceremonial shovelfuls of dirt Thursday as they broke ground on the school’s new building in the Ivy Road entrance corridor, at the intersection of Ivy Road and Emmet Street. The 14-acre parcel eventually will hold the Data Science School, a hotel and conference center, a performing arts center and other proposed academic buildings.
“This groundbreaking is for the first building project of the Emmet/Ivy corridor, which we believe will be a hub for the University community, with classrooms; offices; gathering, exhibition and performance space; and a hotel and conference center,” Hardie said, speaking from the podium under a white tent during Thursday’s ceremony. “And it is fitting that our newest school should be located here. Data Science is the here and now, and the future, and we want to provide our students with cutting-edge facilities and resources so that they can go out in the world and make important contributions to industry, government and academia.”
Ryan opened his remarks by thanking Merrill and Jaffray Woodriff for their $120 million endowment of the school through their Charlottesville-based Quantitative Foundation – the largest gift in UVA history – as well as alumni and supporters who have contributed to the project.
“When Thomas Jefferson founded the University of Virginia, he redefined what it meant it to be a university,” Ryan said. “His vision for how faculty and students could live and learn together was a shining example of what a university could be. Two hundred years later, very much in the Jeffersonian tradition, we are beginning a new chapter with the School of Data Science and its place on the Emmet-Ivy Corridor.
“Even as we construct walls for a new academic building, this school will not be limited by them,” Ryan said.
Ryan said the School of Data Science will be both independent and integrated – advancing the field of data science with a focus on subjects such as machine learning, data acquisition, analytics and visualization, while also involving disciplines such as medicine, business, law and engineering.
Robert Hardie, vice rector of the UVA Board of Visitors, said data science is “here and now and the future.” (Photo by Dan Addison)
“It will do this with satellites and outposts across Grounds, joint appointments and visiting faculty and a variety of undergraduate and graduate credentials for students both on- and off-Grounds,” Ryan said. “It will also be a welcoming and inclusive space for collaboration.”
Ryan said the School of Data Science will be open and transparent, from policies and procedures to results and data sets, in keeping with its special responsibility as part of a public university.
“Today’s most pressing and complex challenges cannot be solved by data alone, nor by one faculty member or department working alone,” Ryan said. “We will make progress only when we bring multiple perspectives to bear in our research and teaching and when we disseminate findings clearly and openly with other scholars and the public.”
Ryan said the school will be an anchor for the Ivy Road entrance corridor site when it opens in the spring of 2024, which will become the geographic center of the University, linking Central and North Grounds and the athletics precinct. Its performing arts center will provide opportunities for students and draw a variety of performers. The corridor also will host an Institute of Democracy, also weaving together many strands of study already existing across Grounds.
                                                        
            
            
         
         
         
