Named in honor of the late Susan Welch, dean of the college from 1991 until 2019, the building was made possible by a transformational gift from Gene and Roz Chaiken to recognize Welch’s enduring impact on the College of the Liberal Arts and the University. With the gift, the Chaikens became the largest scholarship donors in Penn State history.
In January 2022, the Penn State Board of Trustees unanimously approved the building’s name, and ground was officially broken on the project in August 2022. The total cost is estimated at $127.7 million, with most of the funding coming from the state, borrowing and capital reserves.
When it opens its doors in fall 2024, the 143,000-square-foot Welch Building will serve as the new home for the College of the Liberal Arts’ departments of Anthropology, Political Science, and Sociology and Criminology, as well as the School of International Affairs. It also will house the Matson Museum of Anthropology, School of Public Policy, Population Research Institute, McCourtney Institute for Democracy, Criminal Justice Research Center, and a host of other labs, centers and institutes.
Lang said the building will prove “a new epicenter of groundbreaking research and intellectual discovery.”
“For students, the Welch Building will become their newest ‘place to find their place’ — a modern, innovative hub of scholarship, research and social activity where undergraduate and graduate students alike have the chance to learn and work alongside faculty; forge friendships and create a sense of community; and prepare for whatever personal or professional journeys await them,” Lang said.
He added, “I can’t begin to tell you how much I look forward to being back here again in another year or so, this time with scissors in hand to cut the ribbon on the first new liberal arts building at University Park in more than half a century.”