Arizona State University West Valley campus
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Arizona State University at the West Valley campus is a public university in Phoenix, Arizona. It is one of five university campuses<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> that compose Arizona State University (ASU). The West Valley campus was established by the Arizona Legislature in 1984,<ref>House Bill 2376 – Introduced</ref> and is located in northwest Phoenix, bordering the city of Glendale.
For many purposes, ASU's campuses are unified as a single institution so the West Valley campus shares students, faculty, administration, and accreditation with the other campuses.<ref>Accreditation status of Arizona State University Higher Learning Commission</ref> As of Fall 2009, 10,380 students were enrolled in at least one course on the West Valley campus, while the FTE enrollment for the campus is 6,173.<ref name=enroll09>ASU Enrollment Template:Webarchive. 2009. Retrieved Oct 9, 2009.</ref> Since Fall 2018, on campus enrollment has been about 5,000 on ground students every year.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2008, the West Valley campus was designated as a Phoenix Point of Pride,<ref name="Point of Pride">2008 Phoenix Points of Pride Template:Webarchive</ref> and in 2011, construction concluded on a large solar array that powers nearly the entire campus with solar power.<ref>ASU News West Valley Campus Solarization Project</ref>
History

Arizona state legislator, Anne Lindeman, located three hundred acres of state land that the West Valley campus currently occupies in 1982. She also drafted the 1984 legislation that created the ASU West Valley campus. Lindeman also created the legislation for the lease-purchase agreement that allowed for $48 million for additional campus construction in 1988.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Established as the second ASU campus in 1984, construction of the West Valley Campus began in February 1986. Prior to the opening of the campus, some classes were held at five other locations in the area including Metrocenter Mall.<ref>“Anne Lindeman and Sterling and Barbara Ridge". Arizona Republic. December 24, 1999. p. 82. Retrieved July 14, 2023.</ref> The Fletcher Library was the first building completed, dedicated in 1988 to honor Robert L. Fletcher and his family, whose gift of property resulted in an endowment for the perpetual support of the library.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> More buildings were completed like the Sands Classroom Building and the Administration Offices Building, the following year, in 1989.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The second main classroom building, Classroom/Lab/Computer Classroom Building, was constructed in 2 phases, with Phase 1 opening in Spring 1991 and Phase 2 opening Spring 2002.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Originally known as "ASU West," this campus operated quasi-independently of the Tempe campus and had its own administration, faculty, and student admissions process. At the time, the West Valley campus was designed to offer only upper-level undergraduate courses (with lower-level courses to be taken at nearby Glendale Community College). In 2001, freshmen students were admitted, allowing them to complete their entire undergraduate education on the West Valley campus. The academic offerings on the West Valley campus were designed to highlight an interdisciplinary focus in the liberal arts and sciences, education, and business.<ref>History of the ASU West Valley Campus Template:Webarchive</ref> With the arrival of current ASU president Michael Crow in 2002, the academic structure of ASU was reorganized to integrate the West Valley campus into the university as a whole.<ref name="OneMany">One University in Many Places Template:Webarchive Explanation of the ASU campus organization</ref> Today, the West Valley campus shares faculty, students, accreditation, and administration with the other ASU campuses.
In March 2023, the university announced it would be expanding its West Valley campus adding two new buildings in order to add more programs to the campus, among these was a second residence hall. It also announced that it would begin more classes in business, forensics, and engineering starting that fall semester. The University hopes that with this new expansion is can add roughly ten thousand new students to its West Valley campus, helping those in the West Valley, more easily access ASU programs.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Academics and Programs
The programs offered on the West Valley campus focus on interdisciplinary and collaborative programs in the liberal arts and sciences, education, and business,<ref name="OneMany" /> leading to bachelor's, master's and doctoral degrees.<ref name="asunews.asu.edu">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>List of Graduate Degree Programs Template:Webarchive</ref> The West Valley campus is the headquarters of ASU's New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences and Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, and offers additional programs from the W. P. Carey School of Business. ASU's Graduate College, Honors College and University College also have an administrative presence on the campus.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
In 2015, the Thunderbird School of Global Management, which had recently become part of ASU, began offering an undergraduate program at ASU's West Valley campus.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>; (See also <ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and <ref>Template:Cite web</ref>.) Thunderbird's headquarters and its graduate programs, previously based in Glendale, Arizona, are now located at and integrated into ASU’s downtown Phoenix campus, while the undergraduate programs remain in the West Valley.
In 2023, the West Valley Forward campaign announced the development of three new schools that will be housed in the new academic building being built.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> This is bringing Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering to the West Valley campus.
Facilities

The West Valley campus is the smallest of ASU's campuses in terms of facility space (square footage of buildings). The campus primarily consists of five academic buildings arranged around a quad, with a secondary quad surrounded by the campus's dormitories, dining hall, and recreation center.
In 2011, the Gary K. Herberger Young Scholars Academy, a private school for gifted children, opened on the east side of the campus. In August 2017 the school moved into a new 19,500 sq foot building near the secondary quad.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The school currently uses the Cambridge Learning Curriculum and a move on when ready program. The six levels range from Middle Years 1 to A-Level years. The two levels of Middle Years houses students from 10 to 14 years old. The IGSCE year houses students from 12 to 15 years old. A-Level years usually host students 15–18 years old. The Herberger Young Scholars Academy shares facilities with the rest of the ASU West Valley campus.
Academic Buildings
There are two main classroom buildings on the West Valley Campus: Sands and Classroom/Lab/Computer Classroom (CLCC). These buildings house a majority of the classrooms on campus. Sands is mainly standard lecture rooms with the average capacity of about 36 students. CLCC has standard classrooms with a wide range of capacities, but is mostly home to the laboratories of the West Valley campus. CLCC houses all of the teaching laboratory classrooms as well as the research laboratories of New College faculty, namely the wet lab laboratories of the School of Mathematical and Natural Science<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> faculty and the School of Interdisciplinary Forensics<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> faculty.
ASU West Valley has a single standard lecture hall, Lecture Hall 110, with a capacity for 150 students.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is the largest classroom on campus.
A new academic building is being constructed as part of the West Valley Forward Campaign launched in March 2023. Construction started in Fall of 2023, and the building is expected to be finished Spring 2025.<ref name=":0" /> The new building will house additional classrooms, computer classrooms, faculty offices, research labs, and additional growth space as more programs move to West Valley campus.
Residence Halls
Two residential complexes are located on the West Valley campus: Casa De Oro, a LEED Silver complex built in 2012, offers traditional dormitory-style accommodations in which students are arranged based on their academic area of study.<ref>Casa De Oro Arizona State University Housing</ref> Las Casas, built in 2002, offers apartment-style units for upper-division and graduate students.<ref>Las Casas Arizona State University Housing</ref>
A new residential building named Casa Del Valle is also being constructed as part of the West Valley Forward Campaign. Construction started in Fall of 2023, and the building is expected to be open Fall 2024.<ref name=":0" /> The new residential hall will bring an additional 500 beds to West to house on campus students.
See also
References
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