Members of the University community are invited to an open house at 701 Carnegie Center, the new home of the University's finance and treasury operations and most information technology departments, from 3 to 6 p.m. Friday, Oct. 30.
The event will include tours of the 120,000-square-foot, four-story building, which is opening after a year of construction. Light refreshments will be served.
The new facility will enable the Office of Information Technology (OIT) to consolidate many of its operations at one location. It also will allow portions of other buildings used by OIT and finance and treasury, including some of New South, to be repurposed to support the University's expanding initiatives in the arts.
Employees will move into the new space beginning the week of Nov. 2 through Thanksgiving. Staff members will retain the same phone numbers. Detailed move-in schedules and updated customer service information will be available on the finance and treasury website and the OIT website.
In addition to the office of Carolyn Ainslie, vice president for finance and treasurer, offices in that organization moving to 701 Carnegie will be: asset administration; budget; controller; loans and receivables; operations support; payroll, payables and taxation; purchasing; risk management; and University financials.
Five of the six OIT departments will be moving to 701 Carnegie: enterprise infrastructure services, administrative information services, administration and finance, project and consulting services, and a portion of support services. The sixth department, academic services, mostly will be housed at Lewis Library. This includes the Educational Technologies Center, computational science and engineering support, education and outreach services, the Broadcast Center and the New Media Center.
The other offices that will remain on campus are hardware support (171 Broadmead), software support (228 Alexander St.), the Humanities Resource Center (East Pyne), media services (New South), the Solutions Center (Frist Campus Center) and the data centers at 87 Prospect Ave. and New South.
The 701 Carnegie building also will include computer training rooms, flexible meeting and collaboration spaces, a café with indoor and outdoor seating, and a fitness facility. OIT will conduct training classes in the new space beginning in mid-November. University Services will manage operations at 701 Carnegie as well as public events in the space. Restaurant Associates will operate Café 701.
Ainslie said that knowing the move to 701 Carnegie will create more room for academic space under the Campus Plan "is an important aspect of our feeling good that our move supports the academic mission. With that said, moving and change, in general, are difficult and we have been working to make this as easy as possible for employees who have spent a good part of their working career on the beautiful Princeton campus," she said.
"Our new 'near-campus' location is of high quality and has been designed for our use, which is a real plus in our transition. The floor plans are arranged for a lot of light and storage and a mix of meeting and office space that will facilitate new interactions between workgroups," she said, noting that new workgroups recently have been formed, such as the consolidation of invoice processing, accounts payable and travel accounting.
Ainslie said that her team's preparation for the move "has been a major effort that has benefited our readiness to move and new approaches to filing and archiving the institution's financial data," including shredding 12,000 pounds of old paper. As part of the move, her office is working on new and enhanced customer services, including greater electronic access to forms and requests, a new website and a location for an on-campus kiosk for dropping off and picking up forms.
In addition, Ainslie said, "Sharing the building with OIT will enhance our collaborative efforts and our use of technology in finance and treasury."
Betty Leydon, vice president for information technology and chief information officer, said the consolidation of OIT staff from five buildings into 701 Carnegie will make it easier for her staff to collaborate on projects and to serve the campus community.
"Also, being in one location with a café and a fitness center will foster casual interactions, something that I'm sure will lead to new friendships and better working relationships," she said. "The move also will give us a chance to clean out the clutter in our offices, and we've all made a commitment to doing that."
Leydon added, "We hope the move will benefit the campus community members we serve by improving our ability to respond quickly to technical questions and problems, since the support and operations center, including the OIT help desk, will be located at 701 Carnegie close to the technical staff who work on IT problems."
Campus community members will make use of the new training facilities and benefit from "a number of collaboration spaces equipped with appropriate technology where our customers can work face-to-face with OIT staff on IT projects. Finally, we hope the move will give both OIT and the campus community members we serve an opportunity to look, with a fresh eye, at ways to use technology to connect to each other and work more effectively on IT projects," Leydon said.
Parking is available at 701 Carnegie, which is located between Princeton Overlook and Princeton MarketFair and has access from Canal Pointe Boulevard and Route 1. The Tiger Transit West Extension Line also provides service to and from the building. Signs will be posted in and around the building directing visitors to the open house.
The University is leasing the building from Boston Properties.