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Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall | National Technical Institute for the Deaf | RIT
Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall | National Technical Institute for the Deaf | RIT
Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall
Sebastian and Lenore
Rosica Hall
A one-of-a-kind, state-of-the-art facility, fostering innovation, entrepreneurship and original research among deaf and hard-of-hearing students and their hearing peers.
Rosica Hall was made possible through a $1.75 million grant by the Chicago-based William G. McGowan Charitable Fund. Additional outside private funds were raised to complete Rosica Hall.
About Sebastian and Lenore Rosica
The Rosicas, from Buffalo, N.Y., were life-long advocates for deaf and hard-of-hearing people. Lenore Rosica was the sister of William G. McGowan, CEO of MCI Communications Corporation, and worked as a speech pathologist. Her husband, Sebastian, worked as an audiologist for 40 years at
St. Mary's School for the Deaf,
and was a trustee of the McGowan Charitable Fund.
Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall is a first-of-its-kind facility that engages deaf and hard-of-hearing students and their hearing peers, along with faculty and corporate partners, in the innovation process.
Strategic Research Centers
Within Rosica Hall are four strategic research centers, each operating using outside funding sources. They are:
Technological Education Center for Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Students (DeafTEC)
Research Center for Teaching and Learning (RCTfL)
NTID Research Center on Culture & Language
Sensory, Perceptual, and Cognitive Ecology (SPaCE) Center
Additional spaces within Rosica Hall include:
The Weintraub Family Conference Room
The Rosica DeCaro Meditation Garden
The Hearst Foundations Imaginarium
The Delta Sigma Phi Experiemental Teaching and Learning Laboratory
The Rosica Conference Room
The Pulver-Ratcliffe Bridge
The Webb Family Portico
The Crane Family Atrium
The Andrew Jacobson, '90BS, '96MS Lobby
Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall is designed with maximum flexibility to house a variety of innovative projects, including those related to:
development and adaptation of access and instructional technologies; and
innovative cross-disciplinary projects involving science- , engineering- , imaging- , and business-related fields.
Through the creation of Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall and the projects it houses, NTID and the many talented students enrolled here reinforce America’s greatest competitive advantages — creativity, innovation and invention.
Sebastian and Lenore Rosica Hall unlocks the potential of ambitious young men and women – deaf, hard-of-hearing and hearing alike – allowing them to reach their full academic potential and achieve new levels of career success.
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