FARRELL HALL
The John Medlin Commons The impact of Farrell Hall will be felt in many ways. Students, faculty and staff are inspired by the interpersonal and interdisciplinary collaboration that defines the Wake Forest University experience. The building is designed to bridge the gap between the way faculty teach and the way students learn by offering technology, flexible meeting and study rooms, and dedicated space for social interaction.
As the doors of Farrell Hall open to our business students, we celebrate a building that offers new potential broad and deep for business education at Wake Forest. Farrell Hall represents the shared vision of the Founding Investors, the Board of Trustees, the Board of Visitors, Wake Forest University and the School of Business alumni, faculty and staff. Farrell Hall is a visionary space that physically unifies the undergraduate and graduate business programs on our campus. But it offers far more than locating these esteemed programs under the same roof: It opens the prospects of more productive collaboration, research, engagement and learning. The opening of Farrell Hall is the result of the collaborative efforts of our alumni, parents, friends, and business faculty and staff. It is a welcoming place, inviting students and School of Business personnel to pursue creativity in their work and lives. This grand structure, designed and built by myriad talented workers, is more than a building; it is an environment that inspires leadership, character, excellence and service. We are proud of this milestone for the Wake Forest School of Business, as we see that the quality of the environment projects the caliber of education that happens here. We are deeply grateful to all who brought this splendid vision to fruition. At the School of Business, we seek to build a holistic community of learning that strives to weave together opportunities for personal and intellectual discovery, as well as character formation. Our new home, Farrell Hall, is where we will develop passionate, ethical business leaders driven to achieve results with integrity through a dynamic combination of thought leadership, rigorous academic preparation and unrivaled connection to the market. The opening of Farrell Hall sets the standard of excellence for all we do and marks the final chapter in the unification of all our undergraduate and graduate business programs under one roof with one vision. We are proud to educate the future leaders of the noble profession of business. On behalf of those who made this building possible, we welcome you to the new School of Business in Farrell Hall. Nathan O. Hatch President, Wake Forest University Steve Reinemund Dean of Business Retired Chairman/CEO PepsiCo
GREAT THINGS ARE POSSIBLE WITH DETERMINATION AND A DREAM. Mike Farrell (P 10, LLD 13 ) FROM THE GROUND UP When the undergraduate and graduate business programs were united, Dean Steve Reinemund, faculty, staff and friends of the University shared a vision to make the next step a physical one joining them under one roof and making the transition complete as the Wake Forest University School of Business. In October 2010, Mike and Mary Farrell, parents of Michael Edward Farrell ( 10), pledged $10 million, the largest cash commitment by individuals to the School of Business to date. That first gift paved the way for our new home for business education: a state-of-the-art facility designed to foster heightened faculty-student engagement, elegantly finished with a traditional Georgian exterior to match the beauty of the Wake Forest campus. Calling Wake Forest a unique American institution, the Farrell family honored Mike Farrell s father, Michael John Farrell, a maintenance engineer who worked for the New York City Transit Authority. Given Mike s roots, several New York landmarks served as inspiration for the Farrells gift, which came during a deep recession in the United States. At the time, Mike Farrell said, The Empire State Building, the Rockefeller Center these things were built during the Depression when people didn t think they were achievable. When people are confused, scared and concerned about direction, you need to send a strong message that we can t stop thinking about the future. We need to make sure we have the right leaders in place, and places like Wake Forest create those leaders. The Farrells gift, along with the generosity of other Founding Investors, came at a time when the School sought to transform business education at Wake Forest University. Because of these contributions, we are able to provide robust opportunities to a new generation eager to join the noble profession of business. We gratefully acknowledge the Farrell Hall Founders for their leadership investment in business education at Wake Forest University. FOUNDING INVESTORS Mike (LLD 13) and Mary Farrell (P 10) Anonymous Friends of Wake Forest in honor of Professor Bern Beatty (P 88, P 94) David (MBA 78) and Marijke Dupree David Nelson ( 77) and Lelia Brown ( 77) Farr (P 07) Don (MBA 83) and Robbin Flow John (MBA 83) and Megan Salzman (MA 83) Medica Steve and Gail Reinemund Dave (MBA 82) and Sue Wahrhaftig Eric ( 77, MBA 88) and Susan ( 78) Wiseman (P 07)
THE HEART OF THE SCHOOL The heart of the School of Business is the Founders Living Room, a three-story, 8,500-square-foot area where students and faculty gather, study and socialize. The Founders Living Room is named to honor the significant investments from the original group of donors who made the vision of Farrell Hall a reality. This inclusive and inspiring space ties many of the functional areas of the building together, while having the flexibility to host events for both the business school and University, adding to the overall educational experience of the entire Wake Forest community.
CLASSROOMS & STUDY ROOMS 6 classrooms 6 dedicated study rooms 14 after-hours study rooms BB&T COMMONS BROCKWAY RECRUITING CENTER BROYHILL AUDITORIUM HALL OF EXCELLENCE SHARED SERVICES Building Operations, IT, Marketing and Employer Experience A Shower facilities for Dawn with the Dean runners and those who bike to work or exercise AUDITORIUM LEVEL HALL OF EXCELLENCE BB&T COMMONS BROYHILL AUDITORIUM BROCKWAY RECRUITING CENTER
G G R O U N D LEVEL CLASSROOMS & STUDY ROOMS 6 classrooms 2 dedicated study rooms 4 after-hours study rooms BITOVE FAMILY LOUNGE FIRE PIT FOUNDERS LIVING ROOM REYNOLDS AMERICAN FOUNDATION TERRACE EINSTEIN BROS. BAGELS STUDENT ENGAGEMENT SUITE Enrollment Management Financial Aid, Graduate Programs Integrative Student Services Market Readiness & Employment Registrar, Graduate Programs CLASSROOMS & STUDY ROOMS 2 classrooms 4 dedicated study rooms 2 after-hours study rooms INFORMATION COMMONS THE JOHN MEDLIN COMMONS FACULTY & STAFF OFFICES SALZMAN-MEDICA DEAN S SUITE BB&T CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF CAPITALISM CENTER FOR LEADERSHIP & CHARACTER CENTER FOR RETAIL INNOVATION EY PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT CENTER 2 S E C O N D LEVEL STUDENT ENGAGEMENT SUITE INFORMATION COMMONS EINSTEIN BROS. BAGELS BITOVE FAMILY LOUNGE THE JOHN MEDLIN COMMONS SALZMAN-MEDICA DEAN S SUITE FOUNDERS LIVING ROOM REYNOLDS AMERICAN FOUNDATION TERRACE FIRE PIT
3 CLASSROOMS & STUDY ROOMS 4 classrooms 2 dedicated study rooms 4 after-hours study rooms BERN BEATTY COLLOQUIUM FARR COMMONS FACULTY & STAFF OFFICES THIRD LEVEL FARR COMMONS BERN BEATTY COLLOQUIUM
1949 Calloway School of Business and Accountancy 1968 2008 2013 Babcock Graduate School of Management Wake Forest University Schools of Business Wake The Forest New Wake University Forest School School of Business of Business The undergraduate business school at Wake Forest University was founded in 1949 as the Wake Forest School of Business Administration with Professor Gaines M. Rogers serving as the first dean. The original School employed eight full-time faculty and offered two degrees: B.S. and B.B.A. In 1970, the school was changed into a department within the college, and in doing so it surrendered its accreditation from the American Association of Collegiate Schools of Business, as accreditation requires a dean for the business program. In 1980, the department was reorganized into the School of Business and Accountancy with Thomas C. Taylor as dean, earning accreditation in 1985. In 1992, Dana Johnson became dean and in 1994, the school began to offer two new programs: a Master of Science in Accountancy, and a B.S. in Analytical Finance. In 1995, the school was named the Wayne Calloway School of Business and Accountancy, after Wake Forest graduate and then chairman and CEO of PepsiCo Wayne Calloway ( 59, LLD 88), who had been the chairman of the Board of Trustees for Wake Forest University and a long-standing friend of the University. Jack Wilkerson was named dean in 1997, and in 2003, the school expanded to F.M. Kirby Hall in the Wayne Calloway Center. The Charles H. Babcock School of Business Administration was established in 1968 through a gift from the Mary Reynolds Babcock Foundation. It was named in memory of Charles H. Babcock, a noted businessman and philanthropist who led the civic, cultural and business development of Winston-Salem and North Carolina. The School was renamed the Babcock Graduate School of Management in 1973. The School admitted its first classes of full-time and executive students in 1971 and presented its first graduating class in 1973. In 1985, the Babcock Graduate School of Management earned its accreditation from the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business, and in 1993, the School moved into the newly constructed Worrell Professional Center, the first building in the nation to house both graduate business and law schools under one roof. In 1987, the Babcock Graduate School of Management launched its evening MBA program in Winston-Salem, followed by an evening MBA program in Charlotte in 1995 and a Saturday MBA program in Charlotte in 2004. The Master of Arts in Management program was established in 2006. In September 2007, President Nathan Hatch announced plans to appoint a single dean to lead both the Babcock Graduate School of Management and the Calloway School of Business and Accountancy. On July 1, 2008, former PepsiCo chairman and CEO Steve Reinemund assumed responsibilities as dean of Business and Professor of Leadership and Strategy. Dean Reinemund then led an integration study involving the faculties, staffs, and boards of both schools, which adopted a comprehensive plan for integrating the Calloway School of Business and Accountancy and the Babcock Graduate School of Management as the Wake Forest University Schools of Business. In the spring of 2011, Wake Forest University broke ground on Farrell Hall, made possible through a variety of generous donations led by the Founding Investors. In the summer of 2013, this magnificent building became home to all graduate and undergraduate business programs. In October 2013, the University Trustees voted to establish the name Wake Forest University School of Business, recognizing the full consolidation of the formerly separate schools.