Original Article written and published by .

Original Article written and published by .
杏吧性世界鈥檚 Southwest Campus in Mancos celebrated its new building on Tuesday with a ceremonial ribbon-cutting at 10 a.m. and an open house.
They welcomed students, staff and the public to come see what was a once a storage unit and is now the campus鈥 premier Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics building.
There will be a second open house on Wednesday, Aug. 28 from 3 to 6 p.m.
A few short years ago, the campus didn鈥檛 have a STEM program at all. When they started up the program and had select classes, they taught in random rooms in the main building.
鈥淭his is much less crowded, and more inviting,鈥 said Melissa Watters, the STEM academic and career expert at the college.
The new space has an open concept, which encourages collaboration and teamwork. It鈥檚 open to all students 鈥 not just STEM majors 鈥 and will be a great workspace for workshops, engineering classes and the Colorado Space Grant Consortium Robotics Challenge teams, Watters said.
It also has 3D printers, microscopes, STEM tools and robotics equipment, among other things. They鈥檙e additionally planning to collaborate with the automotive department to scan parts and try to 3D-print them.
鈥淪TEM isn鈥檛 just engineering. That鈥檚 why the microscopes are out,鈥 Watters said with a laugh.
On Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., the space will transform into the STEM Center Cafe. Students from any major can come, have coffee and use the space however they deem fit: for STEM tools or study time, Watters said.
From 1 to 3 p.m. on those days, the space will be a Learner鈥檚 Studio, which is more of a quiet study hall.
Kevin Aten, interim campus administrator, said he was at the building a few days ago for an academy where high school students and adult learners worked together; Aten said he enjoyed seeing the range of learners working together in the space.
鈥淚 hope the community members and schools in the area take advantage of this awesome space. I鈥檓 looking forward to teaching and learning and providing STEM workshops,鈥 said Chris LaRose, the STEM outreach coordinator.
Part of what they鈥檙e trying to do is target K-12 kids and spread awareness of the STEM program and get them excited about it.
That鈥檚 what LaRose鈥檚 job is. He said he spends a lot of time in the field 鈥 last year, he connected with 450 kids.
This fall, Watters said there鈥檚 12 students in an engineering class, and only three of them are from PCC. The rest are high school kids, showing the interest in the area.
鈥淪TEM is the right work moving forward,鈥 said Aten. 鈥淪tudents have immense interest in technology. They understand the skills we teach here are for their future.鈥
They all emphasized their excitement at the ribbon cutting, and what the new space means for the program moving forward.
Renovation of the storage space was funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Hispanic-Serving Institutions Division, and a STEM Edge grant assisted in expanding PCC鈥檚 program itself.
鈥淢elissa and Chris had a dream 鈥 they were camped in a closet in a small space, and 鈥 it鈥檚 just neat for me to see two to three years later, see this come to fruition. You guys had this beautiful dream of turning this into something better. 鈥 Thanks to you guys,鈥 Aten said.