,

Crescent Center for Arts and Neuroscience

The building's original design. Photo credit: Payette Construction

Officially dedicated on October 19, 2018, the Center for Arts and Neuroscience, or CCAN, is an 11,000-square-foot space on the south end of campus that opened in Fall 2017. Originally intended to be a bookstore and cafe, CCAN was redesigned and repurposed to become an academic building. The building hosts classes, research, collaboration, and the exhibition of creative works.

CCAN, August 2022. Photo credit: Jeff Liszka

CCAN is the home of the interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program, which integrates biology, chemistry, philosophy, engineering, and psychology. CCAN’s Arts Creativity Corridor features a student art gallery with a high, open ceiling; flexible track lighting; and uninterrupted white walls. Students played a key role in designing the building’s Student Common space by participating in one of three planning committees to create a comfortable environment that would accommodate socializing and studying with friends.

Key donors for CCAN included Alexander Levi ’67 (for whom the Neurosciene Wing is named) and Victory Levi; John Robson ’70; and foundation partners: the Edward C. and Ann T. Roberts Foundation, the William and Alice Mortensen Foundation, and the Maximilian E. & Marion O. Hoffman Foundation.


Sources

Donors Recognized at the Crescent Center for Art and Neuroscience, 2018.

Trinity Reporter (Winter 2018), p. 4.