
As leaders at the Vermont State Colleges ponder the systemโs future, Vermont Technical College is planning big changes to its two residential campuses.
โWe need to expand in Williston and we need to contract in Randolph Center,โ Vermont Tech President Pat Moulton told VSC trustees at a recent meeting.ย
About 600 of VSCโs 1,620 students attend classes in Williston, and 60 live on campus. Thatโs actually above capacity, and VTC is currently renting rooms across the street from its residence hall on Route 2A, according to Amanda Chaulk, a spokesperson for the college. The campus also lacks any food service, and at a recent career fair, stands spilled out into the hallways.
โOne of the things weโre really missing in Williston is larger spaces,โ Chaulk said.
VTC is working with White + Burke, Burlington-based real estate consultants, to prepare a conceptual plan and RFP for a public-private partnership to build a new mixed-use building on an acre plot the college owns at the corner of Helena Drive and Route 2.ย
The same firm has been tasked with creating an asset management assessment of both the Williston and Randolph Center campuses. VSC also offers commuter classes at 10 โdistance sitesโ in cities and towns throughout the state.
Chaulk said the college would definitely like to site food service in the new mixed-use building in Williston, which may also include student housing, offices, and commercial space the college would rent out. The college is also exploring expanding the first floor of Williston Hall into dorms.
Meanwhile, in Randolph, VTCโs larger residential campus, Chaulk says the college needs to sell or repurpose properties that donโt contribute to the schoolโs academic mission.
โWeโre not closing dorms, weโre not closing classrooms,โ she said.
A master planning process for Randolph is set to begin in earnest in the spring, which will include evaluating housing needs in the area in hopes of forming a public-private partnership to renovate the campusโ Old Dorm into apartments for both students and potentially workforce housing. The planning process will also include a restructuring plan for the schoolโs agriculture program to include sustainable farm operations.

The school also wants to sell the Enterprise Center, an office building on Route 66 that leases space to several nonprofits and serves as a business incubator. Chaulk says the college hopes to relocate many of the current lease holders, many whom partner with the college on projects, to existing space elsewhere on the Randolph campus.
The college also plans to sell, lease, or decommission its anaerobic digester, which turns food scraps and manure into electricity. VTC announced earlier this fall it would shut down โBig Bertha,โ as the digester is known, because it didnโt have enough available food scraps to run at capacity.
The Randolph campus would also be the site of the Vermont Additive Manufacturing Collaborative, a partnership between the school and local manufacturers. The project would provide educational programming in additive manufacturing โ thatโs industrial 3D printing โ but also make the schoolโs lab available (for a fee) to Vermont manufacturers for prototyping and small-batch production.
