Ernest L. Wilkinson Student Center

The Ernest L. Wilkinson Student Center (WSC) serves as the main center on Brigham Young University (BYU) Campus. It was originally called the Ernest L. Wilkinson Center but was renamed to its current name at its re-dedication by Gordon B. Hinckley in 1999 after the building had been extensively renovated. It is known by students as "The Wilk".

Brigham Young University
Ernest L. Wilkinson Student Center
The Wilkinson Student Center in Winter
Alternative namesThe Wilk
General information
TypeStudent union
Completed1964
Renovated1974
Technical details
Floor count6
Floor area287,539 square feet in 1964
Lifts/elevators5
Website
wilk.byu.edu

History

This building, completed in 1964, was named for Ernest L. Wilkinson, sixth president of BYU (1951–1971). Planning for the center took 12 years, and 60 percent of the cost was paid by students. The BYU Bookstore takes up one corner of this building. Also in the building are food services, including a food court with franchise restaurants, a high class restaurant taking up the sixth floor, BYU catering's central operations and two other places to buy food not connected with any of the above.

The building also has conference rooms, two large ballrooms, a movie theatre, a full-service copy center, a post office and a bowling alley. There is also a full service salon, Studio1030 and a music venue/restaurant, The Wall. The Wall was opened in 2013 in the location that had previously been Outdoors Unlimited.[1] The building also houses the Dean of Students Office, various counseling and conflict resolution offices, various other student services offices, and a computer lab.

Among specific offices housed in the Wilkinson Student Center are the Center for Service and Learning, Women's Services and Resources, the BYU Career and Counseling Center, BYU Campus Scheduling, BYU EMS, BYU Student Employment, the BYU Honor Code Office, Lost and Found, the BYU Information Center (which also issues bus passes), and the Student Honor Association. The BYU Faculty Center is also located in the Student Center. The counseling center was started in 1946 under BYU President McDonald[2] and moved to the WSC upon the building's completion in 1964.

When it was first built the Wilkinson Center had an area of 287,539 square feet. The bookstore was expanded in 1974 with an extension further west. This expansion costs nearly $1.5 million.

Main area of the Wilkinson Student Center

After the 1999 renovations, the Wilkinson Student Center had 498,000 square feet of usable space. That renovation moved most student support offices into the building. It also saw the change of the Cougareat to a food court format.[3]

In 2017, the old memorial hall was replaced by the reflection center. Although it still listed BYU students killed in military service, the addition of three paintings, focusing on Jesus Christ and his mission, shifted the room to be more broadly a place for reflection and meditation.[4]

After-Hours Building Coordinators

A select group of student employees, known as After-Hours Building Coordinators (ABCs), or BCs for short, roam and manage the building at the end of the Full-Time Employees' duty day, usually 4:30pm, and on weekends. These glorified and under-paid hall monitors are sworn to serve and protect all guests of the Wilkinson Center, the businesses and offices within, and the overall structure and integrity of the building. ABCs coordinate with Facilities, Janitorial, Guest Services, Catering, Campus Security and First Responders, IT support, the Student Union, Cougar Eat, and many more on and off campus entities to make every individual's experience at The Wilk as satisfactory as possible. The arguably best BCs were Nate A., Mike C., and Alisha C., with Micaela S. as best of all.

References

  1. The Wall website
  2. Allen, Mark K. (1955). The History of Psychology at BYU. Provo, UT: BYU Psychology Department. p. 114. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  3. BYU Magazine December 1999 issue
  4. LDS Church News, April 29, 2017

Sources

Media related to Ernest L. Wilkinson Student Center at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.