Penn State Altoona has been a part of the Blair County community for more than 75 years, first as a small undergraduate center in downtown Altoona, Pennsylvania, then as a college on the outskirts of town, and now as a sprawling campus that covers both areas.
The continued growth of the campus has brought with it many opportunities for its students and the community, as well as much-needed revitalization to a once-booming city.
History
There were just 119 freshmen and nine faculty members when the Altoona Undergraduate Center (AUC) opened its doors on Sept. 13, 1939, in the former Webster Elementary School building in downtown Altoona.
A citizens committee led by Ted Holtzinger, Altoona Chamber of Commerce chairman, had raised more than $5,000 to renovate the building, after convincing the president of Pennsylvania State College to support such an endeavor. In 1940, the committee, which had been reorganized into an advisory board, raised another $3,000 to restore the former Madison Elementary School and make room for sophomore science courses.
After World War II ended, the two buildings weren’t large enough to accommodate the number of returning servicemen; therefore in 1947, Holtzinger and Robert Eiche approached the E. Raymond Smith family about purchasing the Ivyside Amusement Park, which had been sitting vacant for years. A $35,000 price tag bought 38 acres of land and set the school up for even more success. The new campus opened in 1948, after the renovation of park buildings, to 600 students and 30 faculty. Retired bank executive and Penn State Altoona Advisory Board member John Kazmaier said, “In my opinion they (Smith family) gave the greatest gift that has ever been given to the city of Altoona.”
Throughout the 1950s, associate degree programs were added which attracted many more out-of-town students. As enrollment increased, so did support from the community. Money was pledged to build the E. Raymond Smith Building for classrooms and administrative offices over what was once the Bathhouse, which gave the school its “Bathhouse U” nickname.
In 1958, with the opening of the Smith Building, the AUC’s name was changed to the Altoona Campus of The Pennsylvania State University. From the 1960s to the 1990s, more buildings were added to the campus, and in 1997, the school officially became designated as a four-year, degree-granting college, bearing the name The Pennsylvania State University, Altoona College, more commonly known as Penn State Altoona. Today the Ivyside campus covers 167.2 acres with more than 20 buildings situated around a reflecting pond, the original warming dam for the Ivyside Amusement Park. The college has grown to offer 22 baccalaureate degrees, six associate degrees, and 19 minors.
But with all of that positive growth came an ongoing challenge of space, so college leaders began looking into a solution that would benefit not only Penn State Altoona, but have a residual positive effect on the city’s downtown.
In its heyday, Altoona’s downtown was a bustling metropolis, considered the cultural and commercial headquarters of the region. But with the rise of suburban sprawl, retail shifted from the downtown to new retail centers such as the Logan Valley Mall, and Altoona’s downtown began a decades-long decline. Buildings were demolished, and those that weren’t torn down often were left abandoned. Thus, was the general state of downtown Altoona until the dawn of the new millennia.