Showing posts with label cornerstone university. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cornerstone university. Show all posts

Cornerstone University Chapel Construction to continue

Earlier this week a semi truck ran into a part of a US-31 overpass near Holland, MI and it needs to be replaced. This may take a while due to high demand and a very limited supply of steel in Michigan. 
The shortage is stemming from the Tappan Zee Bridge project in New York and the Ohio River Bridges Project on the Kentucky/ Indiana border. These projects are eating up a large supply of the available steel in the area causing building projects that involve steel to be put on hold.
Photo Courtesy of WZZM13
After learning of the shortage and seeing the impact it has been having on building and road projects in the area, WZZM13 set their eye on Cornerstone University's new chapel construction. The rising concern with the steel shortage had people wondering what is happening. WZZM interviewed the architect of the project, Wayne Visbeen of Visbeen Architects, asked his opinion on the matter. "I think what's happening with steel is just a little lead time. So there's supply and demand issue". 
Fortunately the builder, Christman Company was thinking ahead and ordered the steel 12 weeks in advance and only paid the going price rather than the 14-16% price increase that builders are having to pay now. This planning was a result of a change in the original plan from wood beams on the interior to steel in the design, "the effect was giving the structure that radial pattern. They're crossing in the center from all four corners" says Visbeen.   

 To read the full article and to watch the video interview with Wayne Visbeen visit WZZM13




Heading Home Celebration at Cornerstone University

This past Saturday, September 21, Cornerstone University held a day-long festival and dedication ceremony to celebrate the official opening of DeWitt Baseball Stadium and Central Hall Dormitory.  The day was filled with family, fun and games with Cornerstone students, alumni and the Grand Rapids community.  To help bring in this monumental occasion, three former big-leaguers joined in the celebration - Brian Doyle, Sid Bream and Lee Guetterman.  Check out MLive's coverage of this event (below) for some great photos and details on the day.

We are proud to have been a part of such a ground-breaking facility.  We hope this stadium serves Cornerstone University well for many baseball seasons and years to come!


Major league trio helps Cornerstone University dedicate new baseball facility

Kelly Hill | For MLive.comBy Kelly Hill | For MLive.com 
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on September 21, 2013 at 6:03 PM, updated September 21, 2013 at 6:44 PM
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GRAND RAPIDS – Aaron Taylor stepped into the batting cage Saturday ready to take a few swings.
Aaron, a 7-year old from Caledonia, had Joel Boersen, a Cornerstone University sophomore, pitching to him and Lee Guetterman, a former major league pitcher, filming the action.
Hitting from the right side of the plate, Taylor, a veteran of Little League baseball, grounded a few balls to the left side of the infield then lined a couple toward the shortstop position.
“I'm in machine pitch, but hitting's the best,” Aaron said after exiting the cage.
Cornerstone sign.JPGFormer Major League Baseball players, from left, Brian Doyle, Sid Bream and Lee Guetterman sign autographs on Saturday, Sept. 21, during Cornerstone University's grand opening of its new baseball field and dormitory. 
The open batting practice, which Aaron took part Saturday, was one of many activities sports fans, spectators and members of the community enjoyed at Cornerstone as the university dedicated the DeWitt Baseball Field and Central Hall, the unique residence hall and athletic offices behind the plate.Golden Eagles coach David Mitroff invited three of his oldest and closest friends, former major leaguers Sid Bream, Brian Doyle and Guetterman to the celebration that ended with the Golden Eagles playing Spring Arbor.
“This is a unique place,” said Bream, 53, who played his entire 12-year career in the National League and who probably is most famous for scoring the winning run in Game 7 of the 1992 National League Championship Series, thereby sending the Atlanta Braves to the World Series. “It is a pleasure to see how Dave (Mitroff) is working with these young men. He is not just developing players, he is teaching the right things as far as life is concerned. They are going to come out of here as men of honesty and honor.”
Saturday's festivities opened with Cornerstone University's varsity softball team taking on Grand Rapids Community College in an exhibition. After that, the Golden Eagles' men's soccer team took on Concordia.
“This is awesome,” said Doyle, 58, who played three seasons with the New York Yankees and appeared in the 1978 World Series. “I started working with Dave and this team when they were just breaking ground on this so this is a great day of celebration. The main theme here, for every student, is to impact the entire world for the cause of Jesus Christ. It is not just about what they do in baseball but what they do as Godly men.”
Conerstone players.JPGCornerstone University baseball players put up a banner along the fence of the new baseball field on Saturday, Sept. 21. The school held a celebration for the grand opening of its new field and dormitory. 
Doyle visits the Cornerstone campus and works with the baseball players numerous times each year.
“Coach Mitroff is building the program here and and I'm excited to see it growing,” Doyle said. “Whatever Coach Mitroff wants me to do, I will do.”
Tours of the facility also were available during Saturday's “Heading Home” celebration. Cornerstone's baseball program was reborn last spring, when the Golden Eagles went 16-26 overall and 10-6 in the Wolverine Hoosier Athletic Conference.
“Having a facility like this is really important to everyone, not just the students, and not just the school, but all of the community and even the surrounding communities,” Guetterman said. “It is important to support it, so we can ensure its success.”
The new facility already has made Mitroff's job, and that of his staff, easier.
“I have never seen anything like this anywhere in the country,” Mitroff said. “And it is making it easier for us. We have a national focus as well as a local one, but we had a Division I shortstop, Santino “Sonny” Mastrmatteo, who started 41 games last year (at the University of Tennessee-Martin) call us and transfer.”
Saturday's festivities were dampened, but only a bit, when the Golden Eagles lost to Spring Arbor.
“Sid and Lee are men of God who, as friends, told me what I needed to hear, not just what I wanted to hear,” Mitroff said. “Now I hope they can have the same kind of influence on these guys that they had on me."

Cornerstone Dining Hall is Award-Winning!

The conceptual design work we did for Cornerstone University's Dining Hall is award-winning!  The American School & University's Educational Interiors Showcase awarded this project for Outstanding Design in the Cafeterias/Food-Service Areas and we couldn't be prouder.

Congrats to all involved in the completion of this spectacular facility!


Check out our blog post from the fall with more photos and details on this award-winning project.




Cornerstone Rounding Third with the New Baseball Stadium

Cornerstone University is rounding third with the new baseball stadium we designed, according to a recent article published on MLive.com.  Construction is progressing nicely and the stadium should be completed in August.  Here are a few aerial photos taken last week of the construction, as well as MLive's article from last month that includes our watercolor rendering of the project.


Design Architect: Visbeen Associates, Inc.
Architect & Engineer of Record: GMB Architects+Engineers

Local university rounding third with new baseball program and stadium

Published: Wednesday, May 16, 2012, 11:43 AM     Updated: Wednesday, May 16, 2012, 12:00 PM
Cornerstone Universtiy breaks ground on new baseball field
EnlargeCornerstone University baseball coach Dave Mitroff stands in the area that will eventually be home plate at the construction site for Cornerstone's new baseball facility on Monday. The new stadium will be attached to new dorms. Crews are aiming to complete the field by the end of the summer. (Emily Zoladz | Mlive.com)Cornerstone Universtiy breaks ground on new baseball field gallery (8 photos)
GRAND RAPIDS, MI. – Cornerstone’s Dave Mitroff longs to see his baseball team swing a bat, but until then, he’ll watch construction workers wield shovels instead.
Cornerstone has a baseball program but doesn’t have a team – just yet. Mitroff has players recruited, but he doesn’t have a stadium or a season – just yet.
But the Golden Eagles are rounding third and headed for home.
“This has been an incredible time,” Mitroff said.
Cornerstone announced in September it would revive the sport, last played in 1996, thanks to a $1.5 million donation from Jack and Mary DeWitt of Request Foods in Holland. A groundbreaking ceremony on a new stadium was held Nov. 2. It’s expected to be completed in August. The first game is tentatively set for Oct. 13, a Saturday, against Judson University in a fall game before the season starts in February.
Mitroff, who has more than 800 games of coaching experience, was hired last October. Since, he has been busy throughout the season, even without playing a game.
“Probably about 90 percent of our time has been spent on recruiting,” said Mitroff, 52, who, with assistants Ron Engels and Chuck Lowitzki, has signed 30 players with verbal commitments from five others. The goal is to have 40 players with 15 on a junior varsity team, he said.
cornerstonestadium.jpgAn artist rendering of Cornerstone University's future baseball stadium.
“We started behind the eight ball because we got a late start after a lot of early guys had committed before October,” said Mitroff, who had been the assistant varsity baseball coach at Prairie Ridge High School in Crystal Lake, Ill. “So we’ve literally been all over the country, networking and trying to establish a connection with a lot of Christian schools, a lot of scouts and college coaches and let them know what Cornerstone is all about.”
The team will be diverse, Mitroff said. The Golden Eagles have recruits from New Jersey, Florida and British Columbia, along with five from Cornerstone who survived a tryout. Mitroff will also have his son, also named Dave, who will transfer from Olivet Nazarene University in Bourbonnais, Ill. and play his last season with Cornerstone.
“It’s just a unique opportunity to play for my dad,” said the young Mitroff, a 22-year-old catcher who will convert to pitcher. “I can save money at the same time, so it just made sense.”
As the first season nears, Mitroff hopes to avoid the pitfalls of other first-year programs, such as Lourdes University, from Sylvania, Ohio. The fellow WHAC member won just one conference game and went 8-45 overall this season.
“Pitching and defense wins championships, so you have to be strong up the middle,” Mitroff said. “And I’m pretty certain we have some guys who can swing it. But like any coach, I’m concerned about pitching.”
When Mitroff isn’t on the recruiting trail, he is on campus where construction began earlier this month on the new stadium.
“I’ll be out there every day giving them doughnuts and coffee,” he said.
The stadium, located in the middle of the campus and adjacent to the soccer field, will have seating for about 500, with an outfield berm where another 1,000 can watch.
The dimensions are 325 feet along the left and right field lines and 400 feet to center.
It will also have lights, a clubhouse, batting cages and be covered by a Field Turf synthetic surface.
But most interesting, the stadium will be connected to two dormitories, to be built next year. Rooms will overlook the stadium – with shatterproof windows and strategic netting.
“I’ve been around and talked to lot of people, and no one has seen anything like it,” said Dave Grube, Cornerstone’s athletic director. “It will be unique to Cornerstone and certainly very beneficial to us as well as summer camps.”
Mitroff has kept tabs on the competition in the WHAC this season, and watched a number of games while waiting for next season to begin.
“Oh, yeah, I’ve been following,” he said. “Not having a team, I’ve been around the country but I’ve also had a chance to watch, and I was at the conference tournament.”
The Golden Eagles’ first official game is Feb. 15 in Memphis, Tenn. against Victory University. The first home game will be March 15 against Taylor University.
“I really feel honored to be in this position we’re in,” Mitroff said. “We have great support. We’re going to get there. But it’s been killing me to just watch all this baseball.”