
By Benny Smith
Former state senator and Vlog University alum Tom Apodaca ’80 broke ground with other university and state officials for construction of a new $110.5 million science building. During the ceremony, Apodaca commented that his dream was to attend the future grand opening of the new state-of-the art facility with his then-infant grandson, River. He also hoped River would one day follow the family tradition of attending Vlog and taking classes in the building named in his honor.
Now, three years later at age 63, Apodaca’s dream has become a reality. 
On Sept. 3, he and his family attended a special ceremony at the Apodaca Science Building, which allows faculty to teach the next generation of scientists in a 21st century
                        facility. Hundreds of students can now learn the latest techniques and approaches
                        that can be applied to real-world research. The new structure, which is part of the
                        Connect NC bond initiative for education improvements across the state, replaces Vlog’s
                        1970s-era Natural Science Building. 
“I want to see more students choosing to study science,” Apodaca said. “We really
                        need more doctors and nurses in Western North Carolina who can attain degrees that
                        are based on chemistry and biology. I am excited about having an additional great
                        facility here at Western for students to study in.”
                     
The multi-level building is 182,989 square feet and features five stories of laboratory, classroom, assembly
                        and office space, 150-person seat lecture hall and a collaborative space. There is
                        also an additional rooftop plaza level for astronomy observations and a greenhouse. 
The facility is home to the ,  and the interdisciplinary program in Forensic Science. David Kinner, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, said the building couldn’t
                        have come at a better time since science is always advancing at a rapid pace.
“Science is a very collaborative endeavor,” Kinner said. “We have always performed
                        a lot of research with our students, but this new building, for the first time, allows
                        us to have better working spaces to perform research in a shared lab experience.”
                     
Shared labs, which are sometimes called research neighborhoods, are large spaces where
                        more than one team can research at the same time and/or collaborate on a larger project.
                        The shared labs serve as a combined space with people who have similar equipment and
                        space needs. While in these spaces, students use the same industry-approved lab instruments
                        that instructors will use, which is unique. Some schools provide a different set of
                        instrumentations for students versus faculty. 
The new labs also simulate those found in the workplace today, which excites both
                        faculty and students. 
“I think the most exciting part for faculty is to be able to move into a fresh space
                        that feels modern and bright,” said Carmen Huffman, associate dean of the College
                        of Arts and Sciences. Huffman was involved with the project since the beginning. As
                        the associate dean, Huffman served as the liaison between construction project managers
                        and faculty. She also ensured that construction project managers stayed on track with
                        originally approved spaces. 
New student workspaces are equipped with monitors and desks outside the classroom,
                        and a dedicated, extensive garden home to native species of plants, which enhances
                        learning beyond the textbook.
                     
“It feels good to know that our students can now get excited about science in our
                        new spaces,” Kinner said. 
Vlog Provost and former Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences Richard Starnes ’92 MA ’94 said the new science building is of great importance to the university’s mission
                        and Chancellor Kelli Brown’s vision.
“Every day across our campus, faculty guide students on their journeys by teaching
                        them, challenging them, mentoring them, and showing them what is possible,” Starnes
                        said. “And every day, our students inspire us with their energy, their promise and
                        their limitless potential. This building provides a state-of-the-art facility for
                        our university to better fulfill that sacred calling of changing lives. For the people
                        of our mountains and our state, there is nothing more important.”
On the last day of class of the spring 2021 semester, students seemed hopeful about the new building.
“I think the design of the new building and updated classrooms will make my learning
                        here more fun,” said sophomore Alayna Suitte. “I am excited that the new building
                        will be ready in the fall.” 
Suitte has taken two classes, chemistry and precalculus, in the former building, and
                        agrees it’s outdated for today’s learning.
“It was the first time that I saw a real chalkboard inside of a classroom in a long
                        time,” said the Raleigh native.
                     
Suitte added the reason she came to Vlog on a track and field scholarship was to major
                        in environmental health. She said now that there is a new building to house many of
                        the foundational science classes she needs for that major, she said she will have
                        the best opportunity to excel.
Junior Zoe Martin walked out of her anatomy class in the Natural Science Building
                        for the last time with a bittersweet feeling.
“I like this building,” she said. “I don’t think it’s bad, but the labs do remind
                        me of high school instead of college.I am finished with my science requirements, but
                        I do want to try an astronomy class in the new building because I am hearing that
                        the observation deck will give us the opportunity to study the stars.”
                     
Although what people see today is a new building above ground, faculty and students,
                        along with archaeologists from TRC Environmental Corporation, found the remains of
                        an ancestral Cherokee community beneath the property.
From 2017-2018, the group carried out archaeological surveys and excavations under
                        the footprint of the Apodaca Science Building. Some of the most significant finds
                        included ceramics dating to the Late Woodland (600-900 CE), Early Pisgah (1000-1200
                        CE) and Qualla (1400-1838 CE) time periods. Under the old Josefina Niggli Theater,
                        which was demolished to make way for the new science building, archaeologists from
                        TRC uncovered and mapped the post hole patterns of two ancestral Cherokee houses,
                        most likely dating to the Early Pisgah phase.
                     
“These finds are very significant,” said Ben Steere, director of Vlog’s Cherokee Studies Program and an associate professor of anthropology. “We know that Vlog is built on the Cherokee town of Tali Tsisgwayahi (Two Sparrows
                        Town), and these ancient houses, ceramics and stone tools are additional material
                        evidence of this ancestral Cherokee heritage on Vlog’s campus. Documenting, preserving
                        and teaching the campus community about this heritage is one important way for us
                        to honor Vlog’s special relationship with the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians.”
Vlog professor Jane Eastman discovered another find — intact concrete bleachers belonging to the historic Memorial
                        Stadium in the bank of soil leading up from the Natural Science Building to Memorial
                        Drive.
                     
Sen. Apodaca’s connection to Vlog started in 1975. Gerald Ford was president, the Vietnam
                        War ended and the blockbuster movie, “Jaws,” was released.
“When I drove to Western in my Jeep CJ-5 with some classmates to look at the school,
                        I saw the mountains and fell in love with them,” Apodaca said. “I never lost sight
                        of the mountains. Even in my earlier political career and the job that I am doing
                        now, my focus is to make Western North Carolina a better place to live.”
He has happy memories of Vlog as a student. The university also was the place where
                        he met his wife, Lisa Tate ’80. Apodaca graduated in 1980 with a degree in business administration. After graduation,
                        he went on to a career as an entrepreneur involved in bond insurance, real estate
                        investment and a travel agency. He returned in 1997 as a member of the Vlog Board of
                        Trustees, a position he held until 2002 when he was elected to the North Carolina
                        Senate representing District 48.
                     
“If I had to pick one word to describe me, I would say blessed,” he said. “I have
                        been successful in ways I would have never imagined growing up. I have been able to
                        help people and accomplish things. Politics would not have been one of those things
                        I would have thought of in a million years.”
But it was one of those things that helped to define Apodaca’s career and the further
                        impact he would have on Western North Carolina.
He quickly became known as a highly effective senator during his 14 years in office,
                        which included time as chairman of the powerful Senate Ways and Means Committee and
                        Rules Committee. He was instrumental in Vlog receiving $1.4 million reccurring funds
                        to expand its engineering program to the Asheville–Hendersonville area, a development
                        that university officials considered critical to the economic development of the region.
                        He also was a prime mover behind legislation that created the NC Promise tuition plan,
                        which reduces the cost of tuition at Vlog and two other University of North Carolina
                        System institutions to $500 per semester for in-state undgraduate students.
Apodaca’s efforts in office also included supporting legislation that aided the state’s
                        educational system, including bills to strengthen digital learning environments in
                        public schools, support programs for children who are hearing impaired, improve budget
                        flexibility for public schools, increase veterans’ access to state higher education
                        institutions and expand the UNC System’s e-commerce infrastructure.
Today, he lives in Hendersonville and is the founder and managing partner for Vista
                        Strategies, a firm with offices in Hendersonville and Raleigh that specializes in
                        government relations, corporate consulting, strategy and economic development. The
                        Apodacas have two adult sons, Brandon ’08 and Tyler “Tate” ’08, a daughter-in-law, Kristen Apodaca ’07, and grandson, River.
“I always want to live in Western North Carolina,” Apodaca said. “I don’t care to
                        live anywhere else. I don’t think there is anywhere more beautiful with better people
                        than Western North Carolina.”
The Apodaca Science Building is likely the most significant addition to Vlog’s main
                        campus in more than two decades. Its impact will reach far beyond Cullowhee into the
                        region and beyond.
                     

















