The first Boiler House at the Michigan Agricultural College was begun in 1882 and completed in 1884. Designed by R. C. Carpenter, it had a square chimney, 60 feet tall, and provided steam heat for Wells Hall, Williams Hall, the Chemical Laboratory, and the Library–Museum. A power plant was completed in 1894, and allowed the campus’ first electric lights.1
In 1901, the Pere Marquette railroad completed a spur line onto campus, providing for easy delivery of coal to the boiler house and the shops, as well as building materials for the campus.
A second Boiler House was designed by Edwin A. Bowd and built in 1904. Its round chimney, ten feet in diameter at its base, stood 125 feet tall. After its completion, the old boiler house was converted to store rooms and a tin shop.2
Along with this building was built a system of tunnels, six feet six inches tall and some 4,100 feet long in total, which carried “steam pipes for heating purposes, the electric lighting wires, and the telephone wires.” Among many improvements, the steam tunnels made possible the demolition of a small boiler house which stood just to the north of the Women’s Building and was a temporary expedient (1900–1905), providing heat to it and the Dairy during those buildings’ first few years.3
The third Power Plant (a name that implied the ascendancy of electric power over steam heat, although the plants continue to provide both) was built in 1921 on a site southeast of Olds Hall and the replacement Engineering Shops—today, the front lawn of the Hannah Administration Building. Its 185-foot smokestack included several tan-colored bricks, arranged to spell “M.A.C.” The 1904 boiler house was incorporated into the new building and later served, in part, as a service garage. The older (1884) boiler house was emptied of its machinery and used for a while as a repair shop and storage before it was torn down in 1923.4
In 1939 the third power plant received a new addition designed by Orlie Munson, but despite several equipment updates its electrical generating capacity could not keep pace with demand. Later that year the College commenced a $500,000 bond issuance to finance an entirely new building, and the fourth Power Plant was built in 1948 along Shaw Lane, southeast of the football stadium. It was designed by Claud R. Erickson in the Collegiate Gothic style, common for campus buildings of that era, and ran only $6,000 over budget. Its location was chosen in part due to the proximity of the old Pere Marquette railroad spur, which ran along the west side of the building. As in the previous power plant, light-colored bricks were used in the smokestack, this time spelling “M.S.C.” The boxy east wing was added in 1958.5
The Shaw Lane plant was the campus’ main power source from its completion until 1975. In the meantime, “Power Plant № 65,” the original section of the T. B. Simon Power Plant with two boiler units, was completed in 1966. A coal-burning facility like all campus power plants before it, № 65 received its fuel by way of a new rail spur that was extended from the nearby Chesapeake and Ohio Railway line (now owned by CSX). When № 65 was brought on line, it enabled the demolition of the 1921 power plant and its “M.A.C.” smokestack, which occurred in August 1966.
An addition for a third boiler unit, built in 1974, allowed the Simon plant to assume the role as primary power generator a year later. Additional boilers were added in 1993 and 2006. In April 2016 the Simon plant transitioned to use exclusively natural gas, thereby eliminating coal-fired power throughout Michigan State University.
For many years the Shaw Lane plant served as an electrical substation. Its “M.S.C.” smokestack, for decades a campus landmark—in particular during football games as it loomed over the southeast stands of Spartan Stadium—was removed beginning in May 2011 following years of disuse, neglect, and deterioration.6
Beginning in 2018, the Shaw Lane plant became the heart of a major construction project to house a newly created STEM Teaching, Learning and Interdisciplinary Research Facility. The $110 million project (including $29.9 million in state funds, the first major building appropriation in decades) added new wings to the north and south, along with adaptive reuse of the old plant’s 40,000 square feet of space. The facility was opened with an official ribbon-cutting ceremony on September 10, 2021.7
Note the short spans of time during which the old plants’ smokestack lettering matched the school’s name. The “M.A.C.” stack was erected just four years before the school officially changed its name to Michigan State College of Agriculture and Applied Science. Its north face was altered to read “M.S.C.” in the summer of 1937, some twelve years after the name change. At some point in 1955 or later that face was changed again, to “M.S.U.” Its south-facing “M.A.C.” remained intact until the stack’s demolition in 1966.8
The “M.S.C.” stack of the Shaw Lane plant was accurate for a whole seven years before the College became a University. It was never changed.
- Beal, p. 271. 23rd AR (1884), p. 51. ↩︎
- Beal, p. 280. Minutes, 10 Nov 1903, p. 189. ↩︎
- Beal, p. 271. Minutes, 9 Mar 1905, p. 272. 40th AR, p. 25. MSU CAPBlog, 18 Jul 2012.. ↩︎
- MAC Record, 29(7), 5 Nov 1923, p. 6. ↩︎
- Minutes, 20 Dec 1939, pp. 1562–1572; 21 Feb 1946, p. 2245. MSU FIT, accessed 18 Oct 2021. ↩︎
- Stanford, p. 112. PP Databook. ↩︎
- MSU Today, 13 Jun 2018; MSU IPF, 9 Jul 2020; MSU Today, 10 Sep 2021; MSU Today, 17 Sep 2021. ↩︎
- MSC Record, 43(2), Dec 1937, p. 10. ↩︎
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