$100 million for Columbia Business School

October 6, 2010 No Comments

“You need to have the best faculty, the best curriculum, the best students and the best facilities. One leg has been missing, and this will round out this great school.” Henry Kravis, Co-founder of the private-equity firm KKR & Co. and co-chair of the Board of Overseas donated $100 million to his alma mater, the Columbia Business School. He believes that this country needs to be able to provide students with the best resources and facilities in order to push the economy upwards and to develop and train new entrepreneurs. For that matter the donation that is going towards constructing a new business school site is said to not only be seen as an investment in a building but as an investment in the future of this country.

“We’re not just constructing a building, we’re building a community of entrepreneurs,” Kravis said in an interview. “If we don’t get our education system right, we’re going to be going backwards. I want to make sure this campus gets built. I think it will be phenomenal.”

The Columbia Business School, which is currently ranked 6th in the world for Business Schools, is thankful for Kravis’ generosity, which is the largest one in its history. Students as well as faculty have said that the old business school restricts creativity and performance, as it requires students to share crammed, windowless cubicles with business students and students from the law school. On the other hand the new Business School building that will be named Kravis and expected to be finished in six years is going to be exclusively for business students.

Kravis as well as Dean Glenn Hubbard are convinced that this project will provide the filler for the ‘one leg that is missing’ to allow students and faculty to work with local entrepreneurs in West Harlem as well as to facilitate more open communication among students and New York’s broader business community.

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