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SUNY Polytechnic Institute

Coordinates: 43°08′02″N 75°13′44″W / 43.134°N 75.229°W / 43.134; -75.229
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State University of New York Polytechnic Institute
Former names
Upper Division College at Herkimer/Rome/Utica (1966–1977)
State University of New York College of Technology at Utica–Rome (1977–1989)
State University of New York Institute of Technology at Utica–Rome (1989–2014)
TypePublic university
EstablishedJune 14, 1966; 58 years ago (1966-06-14)
Parent institution
State University of New York
EndowmentUS $11.9 million (2022; Unaudited)[1]
ProvostAndrew Russell
PresidentWinston (Wole) Soboyejo[2]
Academic staff
290 (fall 2018)[3]
Students2,850[4]
Undergraduates2,208[4]
Postgraduates794[4]
62 (fall 2019)[5]
Location,
U.S.

43°08′02″N 75°13′44″W / 43.134°N 75.229°W / 43.134; -75.229
CampusSuburban, urban, 762 acres (308 ha), Marcy campus[6]
Colors    Blue, white, gold[citation needed]
NicknameWildcats
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division III, Empire 8
MascotWalter T. Wildcat
Websitesunypoly.edu

The State University of New York Polytechnic Institute (SUNY Polytechnic Institute or SUNY Poly[7]) is a public university in Marcy, New York. It is part of the State University of New York (SUNY) system.

SUNY Poly was created in 2014, by incorporating the whole campus of SUNY Institute of Technology in Marcy, New York and part of the campus of SUNY Albany in Fuller Road, Albany, New York, joined ventured with several semiconductor manufacturing companies, including IBM, GlobalFoundries, General Electric, etc., which is now separated as NY CREATES, Albany NanoTech Complex[8]. The Albany campus was restructured in 2023 and merged with SUNY Albany's College of Engineering and Applied Science to become the College of Nanotechnology, Science and Engineering [9]. Other resources of Nanoscience stayed with SUNY Poly in the Marcy campus[10][11][12].

SUNY Poly is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education. The university offers over 25 bachelor's degrees, 18 graduate level degrees, and five doctoral degrees within four different colleges. SUNY Poly students come from across the state of New York, throughout the United States, and more than twenty other nations, with more than 25,000 alumni.[13]

History

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Some social media outlets often confuse SUNY Polytechnic Institute with SUNY Institute of Technology. SUNY Poly was created in 2014 with five colleges, while SUNY IT was a defunct SUNY campus, though most of its site was incorporated into SUNY Poly as its Marcy campus site before SUNY Poly’s Albany campus site remerging into SUNY Albany in 2023.

The Albany Campus Site

The Albany Site of SUNY Poly was originally the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, SUNY Albany, located in Fuller Road, Albany[8].

In 2012, Announced by New York State Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, the Global 450mm Consortium (G450C) was established at CNSE's Albany NanoTech Complex as a $4.8 billion, first-of-its-kind collaboration headquartered and housed at CNSE, comprising five leading international companies working to create the next generation of computer chip technology: IBM, Intel, GlobalFoundries, Samsung and TSMC.[14][15]

In 2023, after redistributing resources and faculty to the College of Engineering, the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering was renamed the College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering and returned to the SUNY Albany administration[9]. The campus labs of IBM Research, Tokyo Electron, Applied Materials, GlobalFoundries, Danfoss, and Wolfspeed were combined to form what is now NY CREATES, an R&D and innovation hub, as well as a commercialization facilitator in advanced digital, analog, and power technologies[16][17][18]. Albany NanoTech is a collection of industry and higher education research and development partnerships largely overseen by NY CREATES, a not-for-profit corporation. Albany NanoTech is a separate entity from the college and not explicitly part of the transfer plan[19][20][21].

The College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering was split and restructured. The part of CNSE was merged with SUNY Albany’s College of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and became a new college named the College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering, with the same abbreviation but different content; some resources were transferred to the College of Engineering of SUNY Poly[9]. The interim Dean of CNSE became the Interim Dean of COE before the splitting, and stayed with SUNY Poly[22].

The Marcy Site

The Marcy Site was built on the site of the now-defunct school, SUNYIT, which was initially established in 1966 as a graduate and upper-division (transfer) institution in 1966 known as the Upper Division College at Herkimer/Rome/Utica. At that time, the school offered classes in temporary locations throughout Utica and at extension sites for several years until the first buildings were constructed on the permanent Marcy campus in the 1980s[23] . After a decade of growing enrollment, the school took on a new name in 1977, the State University of New York College of Technology at Utica–Rome. A decade later, in 1987, the school finally moved to its present location in Marcy and, two years later in 1989, changed its names again, becoming the State University of New York Institute of Technology at Utica–Rome[24]. In 2002, the SUNY Board of Trustees approved a mission change, enabling SUNY IT to offer upper-division programs in professional, technological, and applied studies. In 2003, SUNY IT admitted its first class of freshmen, becoming a four-year institution[25]. This class graduated in May 2007.

Before the defunct, a large portion of SUNYIT faculty were from the Air Force Research Lab and it did not have a structure of colleges. It has accelerated programs in Computer Science, Civil Engineering Technology, Health Information Management, Health Services Management, and Telecommunications. SUNYIT was home to a U.S. Department of Defense Reliability Information Analysis Center (RIAC) and the New York Nano-Bio-Molecular Information Technology Incubator (NYNBIT)[26].

The Time of Two Campus Sites with Five Colleges

During this period, the slogan of SUNY Poly was “One world-class institution, two unique campuses”[27]. The five colleges created at the birth of this new institute are the College of Engineering, the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering, the College of Arts & Sciences, the College of Health Sciences, and the College of Business Management. The College of Engineering and the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering have been sharing faculty, facilities and administration.

The Time of One Unified Campus with Four Colleges

In 2023, the New York State government decided to restructure the academic departments and colleges of SUNY Poly and SUNY Albany in order to continue building Upstate New York into a global hub for the semiconductor industry[28]. Certain faculty members and resources of the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering were transferred to the College of Engineering for the advancement of nanotechnology and semiconductor manufacturing. The College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering was then restructured. Part of College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering merged with SUNY Albany’s College of Engineering and Applied Science and became College of Nanotechnology, Science, and Engineering[9]; some other resources were staying as the SUNY Poly’s College of Engineering[10][11][12]. The Interim Dean of SUNY Poly’s College of Engineering at the splitting was the former Interim Dean of CNSE[22].

Marcy Nanocenter

Located in Upstate New York, the Marcy Nanocenter at SUNY Polytechnic Institute is a premier 434-acre greenfield campus developed for semiconductor & advanced technology manufacturing facilities. Now home to Wolfspeed’s $1.2 billion public-private partnership, the Marcy Nanocenter still offers another shovel ready site capable of supporting an additional 1 million square feet of cleanroom space[29]. The development of the Marcy Nanocenter site in Utica is led by CNSE in partnership with quasi-public Mohawk Valley EDGE to accelerate the attraction of 450mm computer chip manufacturing to the Mohawk Valley[30]. The development plan of the Marcy Nanocenter site includes up to 8.25 million square feet of teaching facilities, with up to three 450mm computer chip fabs, each with a cleanroom of approximately 450,000 square feet, a total public and private investment of $10B to $15B for each phase of development, and the creation of approximately 5,000 direct jobs and approximately 15,000 indirect jobs [31].

Computer Chip Commercialization Center

The Computer Chip Commercialization Center, or Quad C, is located on the SUNY Poly Utica campus [31]. In May 2024, New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced that a $4m Empire State Development (ESD) Grant to SUNY Poly’s Quad C building[32], combined with an additional $16m investment in SUNY Poly’s College of Engineering in November 2023 to support the establishment of a $26.5m Semiconductor Processing to Packaging Research, Education, and Training Center, which is also occupied by Semikron Danfoss[33].

The university offers programs in the disciplines of engineering, engineering technology, and other programs and degrees in business administration,[34] technology, nursing, design, professional studies, and the arts and sciences at its Utica campus, and nanoscale science, nanoscale engineering, as well as nanobioscience programs.


In 2017, the State University of New York Polytechnic Institute (SUNY) allowed the opening of Park NanoScience Center which was initiated by Park Systems Corporation, a South Korean Nanometrology company.[35]

In 2024, the State Government further invested 44 million to SUNY Poly for building the edge-cutting semiconductor facilities[36].

SUNY Poly has hosted the No. 1 Nanotechnology program[26] and the No. 4 Cybersecurity program [37] in the USA, attracting visits from numerous notable figures, including then-President Barack Obama[38], then-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer[39], and current Governor Kathy Hochul[40], as well as Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak[41].



Achievements and Controversies

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Achievements

  • The first 5 nanometer computer chip was developed in SUNY Poly’s lab through collaboration with IBM[42][43].
  • The IBM Research AI Hardware Center was opened in SUNY Poly. The total investment is over $2 billion[44].
  • Artificial Intelligence Multiprocessing Optimized System (AiMOS) was built in collaboration of RPI, Empire State Development, and NY CREATES, which is ranked as the 24th most powerful supercomputer in the world and ranked as the 3rd-most energy efficient [45][46].
  • The world's largest silicon carbide fabrication facility was built jointly with Cree, Inc. in SUNY Poly. The total investment is over $1 billion[47][48].
  • Applied Material has built a research facility inside SUNY Poly. The total investment is over $600 million.[49][50]
  • The longtime partnership between Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL) and SUNY Poly has lead to an advance quantum computing laboratory and its first-of-its-kind open federated XG or 5G network that can be used to connect smart live internet of things where all of the information can flow at once, at 10 times the speed[51].
  • SUNY Poly showcased the first Drone Soccer Robots Championship[52]


Controversial Incidents

  • In September 2016, SUNY Poly's Founding President Dr. Alain E. Kaloyeros was charged with felony bid rigging[53][54]. On July 12, 2018, Kaloyeros was convicted of conspiring to rig $885 million worth of bids for state contracts that were part of Cuomo's one billion dollar investment and was sentenced to 3 1/2 years in prison [55][56]. Kaloyeros actually served in a federal prison from February to July, 2022[57]. On May 15, 2023, in a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court has overturned Alain Kaloyeros's conviction[58].
  • Comedy Movie Investment: SUNY Poly once got its nickname as "SUNY Polywood"[59]. In its 2016 tax filings, SUNY Poly, one of the world’s top semiconductor centers, revealed a $750,000 investment in Pottersville, a comedy produced by actor Ron Perlman about a town uplifted by a Bigfoot sighting[60]. The film was widely criticized, with Indiewire calling it “nearly unwatchable.” The investment came to light after newly uncovered documents. SUNY Poly had also committed to backing other Perlman films, including Asher, which premiered at a festival in Spain[59][61].
  • In 2017, Pradeep Haldar, the former Dean of CNSE, faced accusations from the SUNY Research Foundation of misappropriating $25,573 of research funding. The funds were allegedly diverted from the Research Foundation to the SUNY Poly Foundation for his personal benefit. Haldar, who secured a significant $62.5 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy in 2011 to establish the U.S. Photovoltaic Manufacturing Consortium at SUNY Poly, was relieved of his duties overseeing the grant as a principal investigator in March. Additionally, he lost his position as dean, moves that likely resulted in a substantial loss of income, given his $400,000 annual salary at the time, with a quarter of it coming from research activities. In response to his removal in July 2017, Haldar filed a lawsuit against SUNY Poly, alleging that he was unfairly targeted[62][63]. However, the case was withdrawn later that year in October[64].



Campus

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The college campus occupies more than 400 acres, with major buildings, including four residential complexes, surrounded by trees and green landscape. The "west campus" property of more than 300 acres is reserved for the development of the Marcy NanoCenter. Construction and renovation projects totaling $100 million in recent years included a new student center, field house, and residence hall complex—all completed in 2011.

There are two academic halls on campus: William R. Kunsela Hall and James H. Donovan Hall. Opened in March 2003, the Peter J. Cayan Library is on the southern portion of the campus.

Academics

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SUNY Poly is organized into four colleges:

  • College of Arts & Sciences
  • College of Business Management
  • College of Engineering
  • College of Health Sciences

Residence halls

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Oriskany Residence Hall

Four residence halls are on the college campus, including the oldest, Adirondack Residence Hall, Mohawk Residence Hall, constructed in the late-1990s and located on the northern portion of campus, Oriskany Residence Hall, completed in 2011, and Hilltop residence Hall, completed in 2020. In 2019, SUNY Poly broke ground on its next residence hall, opened in the fall 2020 semester. The residence hall is designed to be “zero-net, carbon certified,” exceeding existing energy codes with the infrastructure to add future on-site renewable energy production systems. Once these systems are installed, the building will use equal to or less than the energy annually it can produce on-site through renewable resources.[65]

Athletics

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SUNY Poly is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division III and the Empire 8 Conference. The current roster of SUNY Poly varsity sports includes baseball, softball, and men's and women's basketball, cross country, lacrosse, soccer, volleyball, and golf. SUNY Poly's athletic nickname is the Wildcats.

The Wildcat Field House, completed in 2011, features a state-of-the-art fitness center, two full-sized basketball courts and four volleyball courts, indoor practice facilities for all Wildcat teams, a running track, an expansive training room, team rooms, and offices for the athletics department's administrative staff and coaches.[66] A new multi-sport turf field, new baseball field, and an updated softball field were also constructed as part of the Wildcat Field House project. The SUNY Poly basketball teams play their home contests in the Campus Center Gym. The "CC" was completed in the early 1980s as the original home for Wildcat Athletics. Upon the completion of the Wildcat Field House, the Campus Center was retrofitted to be used solely for basketball. The most recent update to the gym was in 2016 when the scoreboard was updated and the floor and paint were refinished to match the current team identity. In the 2020-21 season, the Wildcats changed conferences, transitioning from the North Eastern Athletic Conference (NEAC) to the North Atlantic Conference (NAC). In the 2024-2025 season, the Wildcats changed conferences, transitioning from the North Atlantic Conference (NAC) to the Empire 8 Conference. [67]

References

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