One night in 1954, a group of engineers and technicians clocked out from their shifts at the Atomic Energy Commission’s National Reactor Testing Station (NRTS) and drove into Idaho Falls for their first day of class. They weren’t typical college students. They were working professionals, parents and pioneers in America’s emerging nuclear industry.
That year, 114 students filled borrowed classrooms around town to study subjects like quantum mechanics, advanced engineering math and inorganic chemistry. The courses were offered through University of Idaho, brought to Eastern Idaho to meet the urgent demand for nuclear education.
From those humble beginnings, U of I Idaho Falls has grown into a fixture of Eastern Idaho’s scientific, educational and civic life. Seven decades later, the campus has seen thousands of graduates, research breakthroughs and partnerships that helped shape Eastern Idaho’s economy and identity. Its growth has closely followed that of the NRTS, now Idaho National Laboratory (INL).
“We have a rich 70-year history of offering outstanding educational programs that support the economic vibrancy of this region and beyond,” said Marc Skinner, center executive officer of U of I Idaho Falls. “Our long-standing ties to INL, businesses and other institutions give us incredible momentum for the future.”
Building a home
The student population and class offerings grew quickly. By 1961, 306 students were enrolled in classes. A decade later, 538 students were seeking degrees. Still, U of I Idaho Falls was without a permanent home, with students taking classes at Idaho Falls High School and elsewhere.
Enter Fred H. Tingey, who had been with U of I Idaho Falls from the beginning, starting with teaching mathematical statistics in 1954. In the late 1970s, he approached the University of Idaho Foundation with the idea to purchase the short-lived Intermountain Science Experience Center (Intersec) and the 26 acres surrounding it. They agreed and in 1980 the university finally had a place to call home. Tingey became the first director of University Place, where U of I managed the former NRTS education programs, and university-level courses were also offered by Idaho State University and Ricks College (now Brigham Young University-Idaho).
The student population outgrew the former Intersec building, and plans were made for a second building, the Center for Higher Education, which opened in 1994. Tingey retired in 1995, ending one era but launching a new one.
A unique partnership
ISU and U of I had long teamed up to provide advanced education in Idaho Falls. But in the late 1990s, they became official partners thanks to a State Board of Education mandate to coordinate, combine and share educational facilities.
Alice Allen, director of recruitment and student engagement, was hired in 1997 in part to help with the transition.
“Our partnership with Idaho State University is very unique,” she said. “People always ask me about rivalry, and I tell them, ‘We work together, not against each other.’ We couldn’t operate here without each other.”
The two schools combined student services, coordinated programs and expanded access to the wider public. The Bennion Student Union opened in 2000 to house those services and support nearly 3,000 students.
Bob Smith, who served as center executive officer for 10 years, also stressed the importance of collaboration with ISU.
“It allowed us to bring more expertise than any single university could provide individually,” he said.