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CAMPAIGN IN REVIEW

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The most successful fundraising campaign in Georgia Tech’s history concluded on December 31, 2015. When the books were closed, more than $1.8 billion had been raised. In addition to dollar amounts, Campaign Georgia Tech’s success can also be measured by the fact that all of its major goals were realized — and surpassed.

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Page 1: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

C A M PA I G N I N R E V I E W

Page 2: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

Campaign Georgia Tech began quietly with an initial goal of $1 billion, which was

raised to $1.5 billion in 2010. Thanks to the extraordinary leadership of the Campaign

Steering Committee volunteers and our predecessor, Al West, along with the hard work

and dedication of our campus leadership — President Peterson and First Lady Val

Peterson — and an extraordinary faculty and staff, Campaign Georgia Tech reached its

$1.5 billion goal in October 2014 — more than a year early — and closed its books in

December 2015 more than $300 million over goal.

Over the course of the Campaign, we’ve gone through

the depths of a worldwide economic recession. We have

traveled thousands of miles to take the Campaign message

across the state, the nation, and the world to reach alumni,

friends, corporations, and foundations to advance the

philanthropic cause of Georgia Tech.

Ultimately, we realized all of our Campaign objectives,

thanks to the generosity of more than 91,000 donors.

We raised $354 million in gifts and commitments for

undergraduate and graduate student support. More than

$276 million has been raised for athletics. The deans in all six colleges and every

school chair in Engineering now sit in dedicated endowed chairs, providing flexibility for

academic excellence. We had a goal of 100 endowed chairs and professorships, and

we exceeded that goal, reaching 104, helping us to attract and retain the best faculty.

We have built and renovated more than 20 facilities and features for students

and faculty, including the G. Wayne Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons

and the Engineered Biosystems Building, both with more than 200,000 square feet

of strategically designed space. We have named a school, the H. Milton Stewart

School of Industrial and Systems Engineering, and a college, the Ernest Scheller Jr.

College of Business.

These past years have been an amazing journey for the Campaign Georgia Tech

Steering Committee, the many volunteer advisory boards, the faculty and staff, the

Institute leadership — and all who have been involved along the way.

We are humbled by the knowledge of the Campaign’s impact — what the money

will do in support of Georgia Tech, the city of Atlanta, the state of Georgia, and beyond.

And most importantly, for the faculty and students of the institution we hold so dear.

We thank each and every one of you for your role in this extraordinary success.

Congratulations to one and all.

Sincerely,

Mary Rockett Brock and John F. Brock III, ChE 1970, MS ChE 1971

A M E S S A G E F R O M C A M PA I G N C O - C H A I R S J O H N A N D M A R Y B R O C K

Al West, former chair of Campaign Georgia Tech

Campaign Georgia Tech Co-Chairs John and Mary Brock

Page 3: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

fundraising campaign in Georgia Tech’s history

concluded on December 31, 2015. When the books

were closed, more than $1.8 billion had been

raised. In addition to dollar amounts, Campaign

Georgia Tech’s success can also be measured by

the fact that all of its major goals were realized —

and surpassed.

The most successful

Page 4: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

2

What follows is a summary of the Campaign —the goals, the results, and the impact — as well as

high lights and stories of those who gave and those

whose lives were indelibly touched by philanthropy.

In these pages you will see that alumni were the

driving force behind this unprecedented giving,

making up by far the largest proportion of donors

and dollars. Georgia Tech alumni are proud, and

when called upon to give back, they responded in

historic fashion. You will also see that countless

others stepped up as well: spouses, parents, friends,

faculty and staff, foundations, and corporations.

And you will see that planned gifts played an

extraordinary role in the success of the Campaign.

Of all gifts and commitments made by individuals,

planned gifts — both estate gifts and life-income

gifts — comprised more than 45 percent.

On every page, you will see the power of philan-

thropy at work. The power to advance a vision for

the future and to transform lives.

for colleges and schools

$958million

College of Architecture: $43M

Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business: $183M

College of Computing: $56M

College of Engineering: $544MDaniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering: $28M

Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering: $44M

School of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering: $49M

School of Civil and Environmental Engineering: $49M

School of Electrical and Computer Engineering: $175M

H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering: $73M

School of Materials Science and Engineering: $20M

George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering: $60M

College of Engineering – General: $46M

Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts: $36M

College of Sciences: $96M

T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S

1 Campaign Summary

4 Supporting Students

6 Supporting Faculty

8 Supporting Programs

11 Supporting the Institute

12 Supporting Facilities

14 Supporting Athletics

16 A Message from the President

17 Campaign Steering Committee EVERY COLLEGE, AND EVERY SCHOOL WITHIN THE COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING, MET THEIR GOALS

Page 5: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

3

Alumni: $792M

Corporations: $466M

Foundations: $307M

Other Organizations: $119M

Friends: $64M

Surviving Spouses: $32M

Faculty/Staff: $16M

Parents: $15M

million

billion$1.8Between 2004 and 2015, Campaign Georgia Tech raised

donorsA L U M N I C O N T R I B U T E D M O R E

T H A N A N Y O T H E R G R O U P T O

C A M PA I G N G E O R G I A T E C H

FACILITIES AND FEATURES CONSTRUCTED OR RENOVATED20+

OF EVERY DOLLAR GIVEN BY INDIVIDUALS CAME FROM PLANNED GIFTS

45 cents

GIVEN BY ALUMNI

$792M

THROUGH REUNION GIVING

$331M

FOR INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS

$276M

FOR UNDERGRADUATE AND GRADUATE STUDENT SUPPORT

$354M

one hundred and four endowed chairs and professorships

Page 6: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

4

S U P P O R T I N G S T U D E N T S

Opportunity and AchievementFrom merit- and need-based scholarships and graduate fellowships to study abroad and athletic scholarships, Campaign Georgia Tech inspired an outpouring of philanthropic support for current and future generations of Tech students.

In 2007, the Stamps Family Charitable Foundation, founded by Penny and E. Roe Stamps IV, IE 1967, MS IE 1972, HON Ph.D. 2014, made a $5 million commitment that created within the President’s Scholarship Program the Stamps Leadership Scholar Awards, providing full-ride awards and enrichment programs for extremely gifted students.

Since that time, the Stamps Foundation has extended and expanded its commitment to the Stamps Scholars Program.

This programming includes an outdoor summer leadership development experience prior to the fresh-man year, grants to support a public service intern-ship and/or an undergraduate research experience, and various travel and study abroad experiences.

After originating at Georgia Tech and the University of Michigan (the alma mater of Penny Stamps), the Stamps Leadership Scholar Awards are now available at more than 40 universities across the country.

In 2012, an extraordinary young woman from Memphis, Tennessee, became Georgia Tech’s fourth-ever Rhodes Scholar.

Since graduating, Joy Buolamwini, CS 2012, has earned a master’s in education at Oxford University; was the founder and executive director of Zamrize, an organization in Zambia that teaches young people about technology and computing; and founded Code4Rights, which promotes human rights through technology education. Buolamwini is currently a graduate student in the MIT Media Lab.

“The Stamps Scholarship was the deciding factor in my choice to come to Georgia Tech,” she said. “But I had no idea just how many opportunities there would be, because of the gener-osity of Roe and Penny Stamps.”

Joy Buolamwini: Stamps Scholar, Rhodes Scholar

Stamps Leadership Scholar Awards

In 2007, the Institute launched a scholarship program that was the first of its kind among the state’s public universities — a program that would provide a debt-free Georgia Tech education to students whose only obstacle to success was a lack of financial resources.

The G. Wayne Clough Georgia Tech Promise Schol-arship program is designed to fill a gap in the financial aid support system, assisting Georgia students whose families have an annual income of less than $33,300.

The program surpassed its $50 million Campaign goal. To date, more than 350 Tech Promise Scholars from 89 Georgia counties have graduated.

Fundraising was accelerated by two separate dollar-for-dollar challenge grants along the way.

Tech Promise Scholarship Program

Joy Buolamwini

Above: Penny and E. Roe Stamps with Stamps Scholars in 2013. 82

President’s Scholarships

140Tech Promise Scholarships

Page 7: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

5

Francis S. “Bo” Godbold, IE 1965, and his wife, Betsy, made a commitment establishing the Godbold Scholars program at Tech in 1999.

They made subsequent commitments in 2005 and 2010 that have provided life-changing support to 50 out-of-state students.

In 2015, they committed another $2.5 million, bring-ing their total support for the program to more than $5 million and ensuring that they reach their revised goal of educating at least 100 Tech students.

Duane L. Carver, CMPE 2010, became the first G. Wayne Clough Georgia Tech Promise Scholar to graduate from the Institute. Carver — who was homeless at one point during his high school years in Brunswick, Georgia — graduated from Georgia Tech in just three years.

Previously a software engineer with Fidelity Invest-ments, Carver later enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Law and undertook an internship with the Morrison & Foerster law firm in San Francisco. “Receiving a Tech Promise scholarship changed my life,” Carver said in 2010 just before his graduation. “I’m now on my way to reaching my dream of becoming a patent lawyer. I think I still would have had the determination to become successful, but Tech Promise allowed me to do it much faster and at one of the best universities in the country.”

In 2014, Penny P. and William W. “Bill” George, IE 1964, HON Ph.D. 2008, directed a $1 million gift to be expended over five years to support international study abroad scholarships for undergraduates. Expanding Tech’s global footprint and graduating good global citizens is one of the Institute’s five major goals articulated in its 25-year strategic plan, and here, as elsewhere, philanthropy is playing a significant role.

The George International Study Abroad Scholar-ship is available to any qualified undergraduate who wishes to pursue academic coursework or an intern-ship abroad, with first preference for students with demonstrated financial need and a second preference for underrepresented minority students.

In 2014, the Institute of Paper Chemistry (IPC) Foundation transferred $44.4 million to Georgia Tech in support of the Renewable Bioproducts Institute (RBI), formerly the Institute of Paper Science and Technology. In 2015, the IPC Foundation made additional grants exceed-ing $1.3 million to RBI. The IPC Foundation’s philanthropy over many years has provided support for more than 1,500 graduate students.

Renewable Bioproducts Institute

Godbold Scholars: Making Out-of-State Dreams a Reality

Duane Carver, First Georgia Tech Promise Scholar

Duane Carver

Penny and Bill George Create Study Abroad Scholarship Fund

$354Mraised for

undergraduate and graduate student

support

Page 8: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

6

S U P P O R T I N G F A C U LT Y

The Best MindsFrom the beginning of Campaign Georgia Tech, one of the most important priorities was to increase the number of endowed chairs and professorships. With a goal of supporting 100 such positions, the Institute set out to strengthen an already extraordinary faculty by securing the resources that make it possible to recruit and retain the world’s best teacher-scholars and academic leaders.

John Portman Chair, College of Architecture

Stephen P. Zelnak Jr. Chair, Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business

Southern Company Chair, College of Engineering

Betsy Middleton and John Clark Sutherland Chair, College of Sciences (subject to Board of Regents Approval)

The Campaign reflected the signifi-cant, ongoing partnership between the Institute, private donors, and the Georgia Research Alliance (GRA) — through the creation of six GRA Chairs in fields ranging from cancer nanotechnology and nanomedicine to computational systems biology, energy sustainability, and high speed optical physics.

One of the first of these was the David D. Flanagan/Georgia Research Alliance Eminent Scholar in Biologi-cal Systems in the Wallace H. Coulter

Department of Biomedical Engineer-ing, established in 2005 by David D. Flanagan, IE 1976. The distinguished scientist Eberhard O. Voit currently holds the Flanagan Chair.

The GRA provides partial funding and initial startup funds. When com-bined with private philanthropy, the chairs are a powerful recruiting tool to bring eminent scholars to Georgia from around the nation and the world.

Twenty-three of the 65 GRA Emi-nent Scholars statewide are currently members of the Georgia Tech faculty.

Four Dean’s Chairs Established

Karen and John Huff School Chair, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering

Anonymous, School of Materials Science and Engineering

John F. Brock III School Chair, School of Chemical and Bio molecular Engineering

Three College of Engineering School Chairs Established

GRA Chairs Created through Strategic Partnerships

The name Charles W. Brady, IM 1957, is well known among regional, national, and international investment circles. Brady is chairman emeritus of Invesco Ltd., a global investment management firm.

To honor his many years of leadership at Invesco, in 2013 the company made a $1 million commitment — doubled to $2 million thanks to the Scheller Chal-lenge — that established the Charles W. Brady Chair in the Scheller College of Business. The Brady Chair will provide a powerful and strategic means by which the Scheller College can attract and retain highly accom-plished academic leaders in perpetuity.

Invesco Honors Firm’s Founder, Charles W. Brady

These complement Dean’s Chairs already established in the College of Computing (John P. Imlay Jr.) and the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts (Ivan Allen Jr.).

These complement School Chairs already established across the College of Engineering.

In the spring of 2015, the Southern Company Foundation made a seven-figure commitment to establish an endowed dean’s chair in the College of Engineering. It became the fifth college to have a named dean’s chair, and the third during the Campaign.

The Southern Company Dean’s Chair, held by Gary S. May, EE 1985, will significantly enhance the College’s ability to attract and retain eminent teacher-scholars to this senior position of academic leadership in perpetuity. In addition, it will provide the dean with resources to pur-sue research in his or her field, as well as funds for the enhancement of the College without restriction, whether to meet immediate needs or invest in future initiatives.

Southern Company Foundation Endows Engineering Dean’s Chair

4Dean’s Chairs

3School Chairs Gary May, Dean and

Southern Company Chair in the College of Engineering

Page 9: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

7

Thirty-three of the 104 faculty positions endowed as part of Campaign Georgia Tech were professorships, including early- and mid-career, term-of-years appointments, and professors of the practice.

SHAW PROFESSORSHIP In the spring of 2013, philanthropic support was growing for Georgia Tech’s emerging Sports, Society, and Technology (SST) program, which allows students and faculty to study sport in the contexts of historical and contemporary culture.

One major demonstration of that support came from Julius C. “Bud” Shaw, TEXT 1950, retired chairman of the board of Dalton, Georgia-based Shaw Industries, the world’s largest carpet manufacturer. Shaw’s commitment established the Julius C. “Bud” Shaw Professorship in the School of History and Sociology in the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, where the program is housed.

ALLCHIN EARLY CAREER PROFESSORSHIP In 2012, James E. Allchin, Ph.D. ICS 1983, and his wife, Catherine, established an endowed early-career professorship in the College of Computing — the first of its kind in the College.

Allchin Professors are selected by the dean and serve for a term of two to five years during the critical pre-tenure period. “A great faculty is clearly the key to producing great computing graduates, and I attribute much of my professional success to the high caliber of instruction I received over the course of my education,” said Allchin. “Catherine and I want to play a part in strengthening the exceptional faculty at Georgia Tech’s College of Computing.”

OLIVER PROFESSORSHIP OF THE PRACTICE In 2009, James L. Oliver II, ID 1965, ME 1967, created an endowment for the support of an Interdisciplinary Design faculty member to be jointly appointed by the deans of the Colleges of Architecture and Engineering, with a mandate to promote design education across disciplines.

In recognition of Oliver’s subsequent additional philanthropy, the position was named the James L. Oliver II Professor of the Practice in Design and Engineering in the College of Architecture’s School of Industrial Design. Wayne K. Li is the inaugural Oliver Professor, bringing expertise in brand manage-ment, product design, and mechanical engineering.

Wayne Li, James L. Oliver II Professor of the Practice in Design and Engineering in the College of Architecture’s School of Industrial Design

Philanthropy Bolsters Professorships

In 2015, a promising cancer research project received a major boost from one of the Institute’s most valued philanthropic partners.

The Marcus Foundation made a $6.5 million grant to the tumor monorail project, a collaboration among Georgia Tech, Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, and Emory University that involves the design and testing of a novel device for more efficient treatment of brain tumors.

The funding will enable researchers to move this tech-nology into clinical trials and ultimately to the people who are facing these medical challenges. The grant will also enable device design and prototyping, development of an FDA-compliant manufacturing process, and FDA approvals for a clinical drug study to be conducted in Atlanta.

Marcus Foundation’s Grant Supports Brain Tumor Research

104endowed

chairs and professorships

Page 10: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

8

S U P P O R T I N G P R O G R A M S

Setting Tech ApartInnovation, collaboration, and opportunities outside the classroom are all hallmarks of a Georgia Tech education. Thanks to the private donors who provided transformative philanthropy leading to the naming of a college and a school, and who provided vital resources to launch and sustain interdisciplinary programs and research centers during the Campaign, the Institute has made great strides in further distinguishing itself from peer institutions.

It is a rare event in university business education when a name is added to the ranks of the top 10 public business schools. Joining the iconic brands of Ross, Haas, Darden, Kenan-Flagler, Anderson, Kelley, McCombs, Broad, and Carlson in 2012 was a new player: Scheller.

This seismic shift was the result of the vision and generosity of Roberta and Ernest “Ernie” Scheller Jr., IM 1952, HON Ph.D. 2013. The gift of $50 million established the Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business among the nation’s most renowned business schools.

Scheller credits his Georgia Tech experience with developing his entrepreneurial edge and laying the foundation he needed for career success. “Georgia Tech taught me to be disciplined and focused in everything I did,” Scheller recalled. “I owe so much to Georgia Tech and the rigorous education I received, and I’ve always felt a tremendous amount of gratitude and a strong desire to give back to the Institute.”

The first half of the $50 million gift was initiated in 2009 in the form of a $20 million Scheller endowment challenge grant and a $5 million expendable dean’s discretionary fund.

The Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business

In 2006, Carolyn and H. Milton Stewart, IE 1961, made a $20 million commitment naming the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering (ISyE). The commitment established a perma-nent endowment generating funds available for unrestricted use within the Stewart School.

The Stewarts’ philanthropy made ISyE the fourth named school within the College of Engineering, joining the George W. Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering, the Daniel Guggenheim School of Aerospace Engineering, and the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering.

The Stewart School has been ranked number one in the nation for 25 consecutive years.

“We’re honored to be a part of the ISyE success story that was written by so many alumni and faculty,” the Stewarts said. “Our outstanding faculty, bright students, excellent leadership, and highly supportive alumni give us an important edge in the continuing competition to be the very best.”

Stewart Commitment Names School of Industrial and Systems Engineering

Page 11: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

9

BROOK BYERS INSTITUTE FOR SUSTAINABLE SYSTEMS Brook H. Byers, EE 1968, HON Ph.D. 2010, made a multi-million-dollar commitment in 2008 that established the interdisciplin-ary Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems.

Led by renowned sustainability expert John Crittenden, the Byers Institute enhances Georgia Tech’s research, education, and service missions and campus operations through leadership, communications, development, and decision making inspired and defined by the principles of sustainability.

Research focus areas at the Byers Institute include infrastructure ecology, provision of clean water, sustain-able engineering education, sustainable energy produc-tion, climate change, air quality, and nanotechnology.

Tech Enhances Sustainability Efforts

A $5 million commitment from Steven A. Denning, IM 1970, in 2007 established the Technology & Management Program, a joint effort among the College of Computing, the College of Engineering, and the Scheller College of Business. A second $5 million gift triggered 1:1 challenge funds, resulting in the naming of the Steven A. Denning Technology & Management Program.

The program helps create cross-functional leaders in technology and business-related fields by building upon Georgia Tech’s outstanding programs and curriculum. It enables undergraduate engineering, computing, and busi-ness students to learn one another’s language through coursework in their respective fields as well as teamwork focused on solving real-world problems.

Steven A. Denning Technology & Management Program

Named Colleges and Schools include:

Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business

H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering

Named Research Institutes and Centers include:

Tennenbaum Institute

Brook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems

Ray C. Anderson Center for Sustainable Business

Named Programs include:

Cecil B. Day Program in Business Ethics

Steven A. Denning Program in Technology & Management

Cowan-Turner Program in Servant Leadership

8Colleges, Schools,

Research Institutes, Centers, and

Programs

RAY C. ANDERSON CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE BUSINESS Ray C. Anderson, IE 1956, HON Ph.D. 2011, was as devoted to his alma mater as he was to the idea of sustainability in manufacturing.

In 2015, the foundation that bears his name made a generous commitment to the Ernest Scheller Jr. College of Business that will provide $5 million in expend-able funds over the next decade. The philanthropic investment also resulted in a term-of-years naming for what was renamed the Ray C. Anderson Center for Sustainable Business.

Established in 2013 with seed funding from the Ray C. Anderson Foundation, the center was originally known as the Center for Business Strategies for Sustainability.

Steven Denning

The Steven A. Denning Technology & Management Program Poster Competition, held at the Scheller College of Business in 2014

Page 12: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

10

S U P P O R T I N G P R O G R A M S

In 2013, thanks to a $2 million gift from AT&T, Georgia Tech became the first in the nation to create a professional Online Master of Science degree in Computer Science.

AT&T and Georgia Tech joined forces with Udacity Inc., a leading online education company based in Silicon Valley, to make this degree possible. Udacity’s founder, Sebastian Thrun, commented, “We are excited to team with Georgia Tech, whose College of Computing offers CS degrees of the very highest caliber. AT&T is a champion for innovation in education, and we are grateful for its vision in supporting this endeavor.”

Launched in January 2014, the program offers 13 courses to be applied across nine specialization areas (including a newly added specialization in information security). At full scale, the curriculum will consist of at least 25 courses.

Later in 2014, AT&T committed an additional $1.9 million to the program.

AT&T Gift Supports Professional Online Master of Science Degree

The Goizueta Foundation has a long history of supporting recruitment and retention efforts and both need- and merit-based scholarship endowments designated for Hispanic students at Georgia Tech.

In 2012, The Goizueta Foundation awarded Tech a $5 million grant to promote science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields to Hispanic/Latino K-12 students.

The five-year grant will support and enhance the GoSTEM research-based model and will demonstrate how technological universities and school systems can partner to pro-mote academic achievement among Hispanic students in STEM fields.

Goizueta Foundation Grant Promotes STEM Fields to Hispanic Students

Andrea L. Laliberte, IE 1982, MS IE 1984, understands the difference that one individual can make, and her life’s work, philanthropic pursuits, and volunteerism have all been guided by that belief.

Her 2012 bequest provision will grow the Andrea L. Laliberte Endow-ment Fund, providing unrestricted support for the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial and Systems Engineering. It is one of the largest gifts by any alumna in Georgia Tech’s history.

Alumna’s Bequest Will Support Stewart School

Andrea Laliberte

Page 13: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

11

S U P P O R T I N G T H E I N S T I T U T E

Unrestricted FundsUnrestricted funds give Georgia Tech the flexibility to meet pressing needs and capitalize on new opportunities. Gifts and commitments for unrestricted purposes are directed to the Office of the President to be used where the opportunity may be the greatest in any given year. Unrestricted funds were given in the form of permanent endowments and unrestricted current operations.

UNRESTRICTED ENDOWMENTS are often recognized through the naming of residence halls on the campus. A number of residence halls have recently been dedicated in recognition of philanthropy, including:

Left: Leda and Jack Zbar’s 2014 testamentary commitment will one day provide vital unrestricted support for the Institute.

Jack J. and Leda L. Zbar Residence Hall

William R. and Jeanette Maulding Residence Hall

Kurt S. Nelson Residence Hall

Earl and Carolyn Shell Residence Hall

Jack C. Stein House

Carolyn and James Goldin House

Herb Hayes House

Donald M. Gray House (pending Board of Regents approval)

$40Min unrestricted

endowment

$64Min unrestricted

current operations

Roll CallSince 1947, annual giving to the Institute through the Georgia Tech Alumni Association’s Roll Call has been a proud tradition among Georgia Tech alumni across all generations. During the Campaign, Roll Call accounted for an average of $5.5 million annually in unrestricted current operating funds to the Institute year after year. In doing so, Roll Call accounted for the majority of the 91,610 donors to the Campaign. Re-launched in 2010, the award-winning Georgia Tech Student Alumni Associ-ation enlists more than 5,000 student donors each year, paving the way to future sustainable alumni giving.

Page 14: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

12

S U P P O R T I N G F A C I L I T I E S

Foundations of GreatnessA top priority of Campaign Georgia Tech, and the most tangible evidence of the Campaign’s success, was providing state-of-the-art facilities for students and faculty. Over the course of the Campaign, the construction or renovation of more than 20 buildings and campus features was funded in full or in part through philanthropy, reshaping and galvanizing the campus.

On September 11, 2015, members of the Georgia Tech community joined with Institute friends and partners from Emory University and Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta (Children’s) to formally dedicate the Engineered Biosys-tems Building (EBB).

Donna Hyland, president and CEO of Children’s, told the crowd, “We are thrilled to call this home.” EBB houses the Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Pediatric

Technology Center, and will be indispensable to their mission of finding new ways to combat disease. “The cures are going to come,” she said. “What I see in this building are cures.”

Forty faculty researchers have laboratories and offices within the 219,000-square-foot facility, which was designed around the concept of understanding and combating diseases through the power of shared resources, spaces, and expertise.

Private funding was completed in late 2014 — the result of an anony-mous $8.5 million commitment, an anonymous $17 million donor, and Children’s philanthropic support.

Engineered Biosystems Building

Engineered Biosystems Building

20+facilities

and features constructed or

renovated

Photo by Josh Meister

Page 15: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

13

Kendeda Fund Grant

In the fall of 2015, Georgia Tech received a commit-ment for $30 million from The Kendeda Fund to build what is expected to become the most environmentally advanced education and research building in the Southeast. It represents The Kendeda Fund’s largest single grant, and is one of the largest foundation grants received in the Institute’s history.

Currently in the planning stages, the facility will provide the opportunity to create a living-learning laboratory for hands-on education and research that will serve as a model for the region and similar environments around the world.

If all defined milestones are reached, the goal is to begin construction in 2017, with occupancy targeted for late 2018 and building certification planned for 2020.

On April 28, 2015, surrounded by their children, grand-children, friends, and fellow alumni from the College of Architecture, Joyce and John A. Caddell, ARCH 1952, participated in the dedication of the newly renovated home of the School of Building Construction, which now bears their names.

“This facility has a long history,” President G.P. “Bud” Peterson told the crowd. “Thanks to the generosity of the Caddells, it’s going to have a wonderful future.” Steven P. French, Dean and John Portman Chair in the College of Architecture, added, “Georgia Tech students are going to lead the way in the construction revolution that is reshap-ing the world we live in, and because of this gift, they now have the finest construction building on any campus.”

In 2012, the couple made a seven-figure commitment that made the renovations possible.

In 2006, the Marcus Foundation made a $15 million commitment in support of the facility that would ulti-mately be named the Marcus Nanotechnology Building.

The driving force behind the commitment was Bernie Marcus, HON Ph.D. 2015, the founder and chairman of the Marcus Foundation. The grant augmented a $5 million commitment the previous year from the Atlanta-based Woodruff Foundation.

The Marcus Nanotechnology Building — which was dedicated in April 2009 — consists of 30,000 square feet of clean room research space, one of the nation’s largest and an essential element of nanotechnology research.

John and Joyce Caddell Building

The G. Wayne Clough Undergraduate Learning Commons was dedicated on September 24, 2011. The brainchild of President Emeritus Clough, CE 1963, MS CE 1964, HON Ph.D. 2015, the facility was 15 years in the making.

“The journey began with a simple idea: that Georgia Tech students deserve no less than the best educational experience Georgia Tech can provide them so they can take their place as leaders in the 21st century,” said Clough. “This simple idea has led us to a profound and happy outcome.”

Clough Commons Honors 10th President

G. Wayne Clough

Marcus Nanotechnology Building

G. Wayne Clough Undergraduate

Learning Commons

Page 16: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

14

S U P P O R T I N G AT H L E T I C S

A Tradition of ExcellenceThe foundation of Georgia Tech’s athletic program is the ability to recruit and retain student-athletes who embrace and value the experience of earning a degree at one of the nation’s best academic institutions while also competing for championships at the highest levels. Private support for athletics — most significantly, in the areas of scholarships and facilities — was one of the Campaign’s biggest successes.

McCAMISH PAVILION Construction of the facility occupying the footprint of Alexander Memorial Coliseum was made possible by an eight-figure commit-ment from the family of Henry F. “Hank” McCamish Jr., IM 1950. Construction was completed in fall 2012.

ZELNAK BASKETBALL CENTER In 2005, Stephen P. Zelnak Jr., IM 1969, was the lead donor in supporting the construction of a state-of-the-art basket-ball practice facility for the men’s and women’s teams.

JOHN AND MARY BROCK FOOTBALL FACILITY Campaign Georgia Tech Co-Chairs Mary R. and John F. Brock III, ChE 1970, MS ChE 1971, com-mitted half the total project cost of the football team’s 80,000-square-foot practice facility. The facility allows the Yellow Jackets to practice during periods of inclement or prohibitively hot weather.

KEN BYERS TENNIS COMPLEX Kenneth G. Byers Jr., EE 1966, made the lead commitment in supporting the construction of a complex incorporating 10 outdoor courts (six competition and four practice) and a six-court indoor facility. It is one of the nation’s premier college tennis facilities.

RUSS CHANDLER STADIUM ( RENOVATION) In 2014, an anonymous donor launched a challenge to raise $5 million for the first phase of a two-phase renovation to the baseball stadium. The challenge was successful, and the facility’s enhance-ments were focused on interior spaces including the locker room and lounge, training room, coaches’ locker room, and study room.

NOONAN GOLF FACILITY The $13 million project began with purchasing the land and encompasses a full-scale renovation and redesign of the practice facility used by the golf team. From the beginning, the leading philanthropic supporters were Thomas E. Noonan, ME 1983, and Kim P. Noonan, IMGT 1983. When completed in fall 2016, it will feature a new building with interior spaces for year-round use, hitting bays, a par 3 complex, and chipping and pitching greens.

Athletics facilities that were constructed or renovated during Campaign Georgia Tech include:

State-of-the-Art Facilities

John and Mary Brock Football Facility

McCamish Pavilion

Page 17: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

15

In 2009, Mark Teixeira, Class of 2002, made a $500,000 commitment that fully endowed a Tech baseball scholarship.

A power-hitting first baseman for the New York Yankees, Teixeira has always been passionate about the power of philanthropy. Since leaving Tech, he has given generously to athletics — in particular Georgia Tech’s strength and conditioning program, the golf team, and the Russ Chan-dler Stadium renovation project — as well as the Scheller College of Business.

In his words, “This gift was a no-brainer, now that I am in a position to do something significant.”

Similar to a dean’s discretionary fund, the athletics fund allows Director of Athletics Mike Bobinski to address pressing needs and meet unexpected challenges across all of athletics through an endowed, unrestricted fund. As a result of the Campaign, the fund was significantly enhanced, providing increased flexibility and an invaluable resource to keep Tech athletics competitive.

Teixeira Endows Baseball ScholarshipDirector of Athletics Discretionary Fund

Mark Teixeira

Gift Honors Former Coach, Supports Aquatic CenterFor two decades, the Aquatic Center has been a sig-nature feature within the Campus Recreation Center as well as a focal point for campus tours. Thanks to one alumnus, it will bear the name of a beloved Tech swimming coach.

The facility, which will be known as the McAuley Aquatic Center, was named to honor James Herbert “Herb” McAuley, EE 1947, the former swimming champion who devoted four decades to coaching swimmers at Tech — both competitive swimmers and undergraduates taking the compulsory and infamous “drown-proofing” class.

Richard L. Bergmark, IMGT 1975, is the man who made it possible. “This is a fantastic way to give recognition to Coach McAuley,” he explained. “He was a great coach, a mentor, a generous person, and a Tech alumnus himself.”

In 2007, the family of the late William E. “Bill” Moore, IM 1938, made a seven-figure commitment to establish the Moore Family Scholarship Fund for Women’s Tennis. The Moore family was inspired in part by the team’s 2007 NCAA national title.

On November 29, 2014, Harrison Butker, ISyE 2017, kicked a career-long 53-yard field goal on the last play of regulation against ninth-ranked University of Georgia. The Yellow Jackets won the game in overtime, 30-24.

VIDEO: Your philanthropy has taken Georgia Tech athletics to the next level. See the transformation through the eyes of current and former student-athletes, coaches, and Yellow Jacket supporters.

Page 18: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

16

“Our time. Our legacy.” A year after my arrival at Georgia Tech, we introduced this theme as part of the launch of the public phase of our comprehensive fundraising campaign. At that time it was hard to imagine that today, a little over five years later, we would be celebrating our incredible success.

Our time — When Val and I arrived at Georgia Tech in April 2009, our country was in the midst of one of the most significant recessions in U.S. history. Soon after, the Georgia Tech community came together and created a 25-year strategic plan, “Design-ing the Future,” which served as the blueprint upon which we would launch the public phase of the Campaign. We launched in fall 2010, communicating our shared goals and vision — and the Georgia Tech community responded in a way that we could have never imagined! Today, we have not only met the challenge; we have exceeded our goal of $1.5 billion by more than $300 million.

Our legacy —The strategic plan was designed to be visionary and flexible, but with specific goals that would place Georgia Tech in a position of global leadership. We are well on our way, thanks to our remarkable faculty, staff, and students, and to the generosity of tens of thousands of supporters who know what Georgia Tech has meant in their lives and want to pass along those same advantages to others.

While our goal of raising $1.5 billion was very ambitious, it was never really about the money — it was, and continues to be, about the people. One of the greatest pleasures of my job has been to shake our graduates’ hands as they cross the stage at Commence-ment. They include merit- and need-based scholars; our outstanding Tech Promise scholars, whose lives will never be the same; our student-athletes; and students from around the world.

I look out and see the faces of family and friends who have been there to support our graduates, and know that behind the scenes there are thousands of people like you who have worked to help them meet their goals but also to make Georgia Tech one of the best public research universities in the nation, and increasingly, the world.

While Campaign Georgia Tech is now officially over, its impact lives on. Just this past year, we welcomed the best qualified and most diverse class in Georgia Tech history for the seventh year in a row; opened the Engineered Biosystems Building; discovered liquid water on Mars; dedicated the Einstein Monument; celebrated Tech’s 250th Commence-ment; and saw our students, faculty, and staff do some simply amazing things in the classrooms, laboratories, and our communities.

While all of this is exciting, the future is even more exciting, and it simply would not be possible without the support of 91,610 alumni, friends, and organizations who gave to Campaign Georgia Tech. We are especially grateful to President Emeritus G. Wayne Clough and Al West, former chair of the Campaign Steering Committee, for their leader-ship during the Campaign’s initial phase, and John and Mary Brock, co-chairs during the public phase. And, I would like to extend a special thanks to Val for her enthusiasm and tireless support throughout the Campaign.

Thanks to you, there is no limit to what the Georgia Tech community can accomplish. We extend our most sincere thanks to each and every one of you.

Sincerely,

G.P. “Bud” PetersonPresident, Georgia Institute of Technology

A M E S S A G E F R O M T H E P R E S I D E N T

Val and G.P. “Bud” Peterson

Page 19: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

Honorary Chairs

Warren L. Batts, EE 1961Chicago, Illinois

Shawn & Brook Byers, EE 1968, HON Ph.D. 2010Menlo Park, California

Roberta & Steven A. Denning, IM 1970Greenwich, Connecticut

Susan & Michael T. Duke, IE 1971, HON Ph.D. 2011Bentonville, Arkansas

Anita P. & Julian D. Saul, IM 1962Dalton, Georgia

Roberta & Ernest Scheller Jr., IM 1952, HON Ph.D. 2013Villanova, Pennsylvania

Penny & E. Roe Stamps IV, IE 1967, MS IE 1972, HON Ph.D. 2014Miami, Florida

Carolyn & H. Milton Stewart, IE 1961Vero Beach, Florida

Suzanne & Michael E. Tennenbaum, IE 1958Rio Grande, Puerto Rico

Alfred P. West Jr., AE 1964, HON Ph.D. 2010Oaks, Pennsylvania

Co-Chairs

Mary R. & John F. Brock III, ChE 1970, MS ChE 1971Atlanta, Georgia

Vice Chairs

Rodney C. Adkins, EE 1981, MS EE 1983, HON Ph.D. 2013Miami Beach, Florida

Kenneth G. Byers Jr., EE 1966, MS EE 1968Atlanta, Georgia

David W. Dorman, IM 1975Hillsborough, California

Francis S. “Bo” Godbold, IE 1965Tierra Verde, Florida

Gary T. Jones, GMGT 1971Atlanta, Georgia

Frances G. Rogers, ECON 1983Atlanta, Georgia

Joseph W. Rogers Jr., IM 1968Atlanta, Georgia

William J. Todd, IM 1971Atlanta, Georgia

Stephen P. Zelnak Jr., IM 1969Raleigh, North Carolina

C A M PA I G N S T E E R I N G C O M M I T T E E

At-Large Members

H. Inman AllenAtlanta, Georgia

G. Niles Bolton, ARCH 1968Atlanta, Georgia

Charles W. Brady, IM 1957Atlanta, Georgia

A. Russell Chandler III, IE 1967Atlanta, Georgia

William R. Collins Jr., ME 1957, MS IM 1963Atlanta, Georgia

Joseph W. Evans, IM 1971Atlanta, Georgia

Thomas A. Fanning, IMGT 1979, MS IMGT 1980, HON Ph.D. 2013Atlanta, Georgia

David D. Flanagan, IE 1976McLean, Virginia

Hubert L. Harris, IM 1965Atlanta, Georgia

Lawrence P. Huang, BMGT 1973Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida

John R. Huff, CE 1968Houston, Texas

Andrea L. Laliberte, IE 1982, MS IE 1984Jacksonville, Florida

John S. Markwalter Jr., IMGT 1981Atlanta, Georgia

David M. McKenney, PHYS 1960, IE 1964Atlanta, Georgia

Robert A. Milton, IMGT 1983Godalming, Surrey, England

Charles D. Moseley, IE 1965Atlanta, Georgia

Deborah A. Nash, IE 1978Medina, Washington

Michael A. Neal, IMGT 1975Westport, Connecticut

Lawton M. Nease III, IM 1965Atlanta, Georgia

Parker H. Petit, ME 1962, MS EM 1964Marietta, Georgia

Beverly J. SeayOrlando, Florida

C. Meade Sutterfield, EE 1972Atlanta, Georgia

Howard T. Tellepsen Jr., CE 1966Houston, Texas

Ex Officio

Michael K. Anderson, IE 1979Atlanta, Georgia

Benton J. Mathis Jr., IMGT 1981Marietta, Georgia

If you did not receive Campaign Quarterly (CQ) during Campaign Georgia Tech and would like to

learn more about the impact of philanthropy at Tech, email [email protected]

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Page 20: Campaign Georgia Tech Campaign in Review

We build on foundations we did not lay.

We warm ourselves by fires we did not light.

We sit in the shade of trees we did not plant.

We drink from wells we did not dig.

We profit from persons we did not know.

We are ever bound in community.

May it always be so.

We Build on Foundations We Did Not Lay

Rev. Peter Spilman Raible, 1929 – 2004

Copyright 2016 Georgia Institute of Technology Institute Communications • N16C7018B An equal education and employment opportunity institution