New York State’s attorney general Letitia James approved the university’s request to occupy the space for a new campus in New York City, per an Aug. 11 announcement. The campus, for which the university first announced plans last September, is being built in the historic Chelsea neighborhood in Manhattan through a 99-year lease agreement with the General Theological Seminary.
Programs occurring on the Chelsea campus will focus on the opportunities New York City provides in four fields of interest: technology, finance, media and visual and musical arts. Vanderbilt Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs C. Cybele Raver discussed the campus’s role in providing alumni with these opportunities in the announcement.
“This campus will serve as a vibrant hub for discovery and collaboration that will enable students and faculty to immerse themselves in the rich intellectual and professional opportunities unique to New York City,” Raver said.
Will McDermott, a senior from northern New Jersey, said he believes the campus is in a good location for students looking to build a local network. He said he hopes to start a career in finance, one of the campus’s focuses, following graduation.
“I think it’s great that [Vanderbilt] is expanding into [New York City]. It feels like a clear push towards helping students land jobs in finance, and a Manhattan campus is a great launch point for that,” McDermott said. “Having grown up near [New York City], I’ve seen the importance of building a local network, and opening up that avenue to students not from the area is a great step towards making the pathway to finance more inclusive.”
New York City is home to the largest Vanderbilt community outside of the Nashville metropolitan area and the state of Tennessee. The Chelsea campus will work to increase the university’s engagement with the city’s alumni, as well as prospective students in New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania.
Junior Alex Gawler is from northern New Jersey and discussed the benefits of Vanderbilt’s presence being closer to alumni in the New York City metropolitan area.
“Given that we have so many alums in the [New York City] area, my hope with the Manhattan campus is that it will open up new ways to connect current students with them,” Gawler said. “Especially as someone from that area who intends to move back to the northeast post-grad, it would be great to have a Vanderbilt hub closer by to lean on for support when trying to navigate my early career path.”
Provost Raver also commented on how the programming that will be offered at the new campus will play a role in the university being a “global university.”
“Vanderbilt’s programs in New York will complement those offered at our home campus in Nashville as a ‘study-away’ site, creating a pipeline of graduates interested in careers in New York City reflective of its strengths and culture,” Raver said. “By building bridges between Nashville and New York, we are empowering our university community to make an even greater impact locally and globally.”
While this is the first lease approval Vanderbilt has received, this is not the only expansion announced in recent months. Last fall, Vanderbilt announced a proposal to open a graduate school campus in West Palm Beach, Florida, dedicated to business and computing programs. This summer, Vanderbilt also confirmed its intentions to open a campus in San Francisco, California, and expand its Nashville campus to include a new “innovation district.”