Canadian Packaging

Toray Plastics (America) helps university break ground on new $125-million engineering complex

By Canadian Packaging staff   

General Plastic Toray Plastics (America) University of Rhode Island URI College of Engineering

New University of Rhode Island engineering complex gives Toray naming rights for building's atrium.

North Kingstown, Rhode Island—On April 24, 2017 with spades in hand, Rhode Island governor Gina Raimondo, University of Rhode Island president David M. Dooley, Toray Plastics (America) president and chief executive officer Mike Brandmeier, URI College of Engineering dean Raymond Wright, and URI College of Engineering student Kalvin Cho,  broke ground on the construction of a new, $125 million engineering complex at URI.

In 2014 Toray pledged $2 million for the project; the pledge was contingent on the passage of a bond referendum, which Rhode Islanders overwhelmingly approved in November of that year.

The project will produce a 190,000-square-foot facility designed to foster interdisciplinary collaboration and innovation that can evolve to meet the technology-driven changes in all sectors of engineering.

This first phase of the transformation of the engineering facilities marks the largest construction project in the university’s history; it is set for completion in summer 2019.

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The new building will house seven of the eight university engineering programs: biomedical, chemical, civil, computer, electrical, industrial, and systems and mechanical. Toray’s gift grants the company naming rights for the atrium of the new building.

“Students coming out of the university, and specifically the College of Engineering, are exactly the type of workforce we need in Rhode Island in order for us to succeed locally, nationally, and even internationally,” says Brandmeier. “The new buildings, labs, and work spaces will enhance the skills and abilities of the next generation of URI engineering graduates, making them even more valuable to those of us in the state who depend on their talent and expertise.”

In addition to the pledge, Toray has contributed $2-million in gifts to URI’s College of Engineering, primarily supporting the Toray Plastics of (America), Inc. Engineering Fellowship and the Toray Plastics of (America), Inc. Scholarship for undergraduate students. The company also offers internships and sponsors special engineering design projects for students to pursue during their senior year.

Toray Plastics (America), Inc., is a leading manufacturer of polyester, polypropylene, bio-based, and metalized films for flexible and rigid packaging, lidding, graphic, industrial, optical, and electronic applications and conducts all its manufacturing and metalizing at one location. Toray is also a leader in the manufacture of polyolefin, polypropylene, and polyethylene foams for the automotive and flooring industries. The company is a subsidiary of Toray Industries, Inc., the world leader in synthetic fibers and textiles, carbon fibers, plastics, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, and high-performance films, which has annual sales exceeding US$19 billion. For more information about Toray Plastics visit www.toraytpa.com.

Photo above caption: Toray Plastics (America)’s president and chief executive officer Mike Brandmeier (second from left), Kalvin Cho (left), a URI College of Engineering student; David M. Dooley (center), president of URI; Gina Raimondo (second from right), Governor of Rhode Island; and Raymond Wright, Dean of the College of Engineering at URI at the groundbreaking of a new, $125 million engineering complex. Photo credit: Nora Lewis, URI.

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