09/17/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 09/17/2025 14:49
By Marcus Smith '27, Student Correspondent
Lackawanna County Commissioner Bill Gaughan ʼ09 paid a visit to Robert S. ʼ68 and Marilyn A. Weiss Hall on Friday to tour the IDEA Center, which opened as a part of the new building earlier this semester.
University authorities gave Gaughan and a couple other county officials a special tour of the Center and Weiss Hall, much to their approval.
"This really does make you want to go back to school," Gaughan said upon seeing the building's new educational facilities.
The IDEA (Innovation, Design, Education, Application) Center serves as a creative space for students and faculty alike, with plans to open it to the community at large in the near future.
The Center is home to various creative machines and spaces including but not limited to a woodworking station, a podcast studio, embroidery machines and a laser-engraver.
The engraver is so precise it can be used to engrave almost anything from wood to metal to glass.
"You could even engrave Fig Newtons," Gerry Zaboski ʼ87 G'95, the senior vice president for the office of the president, said.
He isn't lying either. Cookies were actually engraved with special designs using the machines for the dedication ceremony two weeks ago.
Perhaps the standout attraction of the IDEA Center is the industrial quality 3-D printing station.
These state-of-the-art resin printers use flashes of ultraviolet light to create highly detailed models that are of a higher quality than traditional filament printers.
According to Tom Bryan, the director of the IDEA Center, these 3-D printers are of special interest to the Occupational and Physical Therapy Departments.
"These machines can create really accurate assistive technologies, customized for an individual's specific physical structure," Bryan said. "It's a huge draw for students and faculty."
Other highlights of the tour included seeing the Cybercrime and Homeland Security Department and meditation garden.
Additionally, there are 10,000 feet of unused space in the top floor of Weiss Hall that have yet to be implemented.
"You don't have to build more space, more already exists," Kristin Magurette, the county director for economic development, said.
Weiss Hall's location near the edge of campus also is an advantage, as members of the Greater Scranton community will be able to make use of the IDEA Center's resources in the near future.
According to Zaboski, the building was intended to be a bridge with the community.
"When we were designing Weiss Hall, we thought about how it would encourage community engagement," Zaboskisaid.
Gaughan praised the new IDEA Center, particularly, and Weiss Hall, in general, as another fine addition to the Scranton community.
He hopes the new facilities will help attract more people to Lackawanna County in the future and help improve the city economy.
"The University has a history of working with the county, and this is another great addition to that history," Gaughan said.
Marcus Smith '27, Schuylkill Haven, is an English and theatre double major at Scranton.