No shovels turned dirt Monday to mark the start of in downtown West Palm Beach.
That鈥檚 still to come.
Rather it鈥檚 the community鈥檚 investment in that brought out the news cameras to CityPlace Monday morning for an announcement from Vanderbilt Chancellor Daniel Diermeier.
The first phase of fundraising, spearheaded by downtown developer Stephen Ross鈥 $50 million contribution, has drawn about $300 million, enough for Diermeier to declare: 鈥淭oday, Vanderbilt makes its commitment clear. We are all in on West Palm Beach.鈥
The first phase went so well, Vanderbilt kicked off a second phase on Monday to raise an additional $250 million.
The money will help develop the campus鈥 signature features, academic programs, faculty recruitment, student scholarships and other initiatives, Vanderbilt said in a statement.
鈥淲e are now calling on the residents and businesses of South Florida, as well as our global Vanderbilt community, to invest with us in this bold project and all it will create for the Palm Beach area鈥檚 economy, workforce and innovation ecosystem,鈥 Diermeier said at the Related Ross Experience Center on the former site of The Cheesecake Factory restaurant.
READ MORE: First Look: Vanderbilt University campus in West Palm Beach
This renewed commitment from Vanderbilt triggers the start of a series of actions: closing on the 7 acres east of Tamarind Avenue from Fern to Datura streets donated by Palm Beach County and West Palm Beach, completing architectural designs and breaking ground.
They have five to six years to develop the project but are moving faster than expected, , vice chancellor for government and community relations said in an interview. He said pledges so far total between $280 million and $340 million.
The graduate school campus continues to evolve, Green said. They鈥檙e now making plans for undergraduates to attend for a semester or two in a 鈥渟tudy-away鈥 program.
鈥淲e need to be constantly challenging assumptions,鈥 he said.
Vanderbilt鈥檚 first campus outside of Nashville, Tenn., is in New York and it recently announced the Institute for Quantum Innovation in Chattanooga, Tenn.
Its West Palm campus is expected to focus on graduate education and research in finance, management, engineering, space technology, defense technology and business innovation.
鈥淭his partnership 鈥 elevates our national profile as a center for innovation,鈥 West Palm Beach Mayor Keith James said at the event, 鈥渁nd helps ensure that the jobs of the future are being created and filled right here.鈥
In February, Vanderbilt announced that it of Boston as lead architect. Howard Elkus, the company鈥檚 late co-founder, designed CityPlace.
Vanderbilt in March 2024 after the University of Florida pulled out. That deal unraveled in February 2023 after UF and billionaire landowner Jeff Greene couldn鈥檛 agree to terms, including naming rights, for Greene鈥檚 donation of land, The Palm Beach Post reported. Around that same time, UF announced plans to build a graduate school in Jacksonville.
The Vanderbilt approach moves forward without the 5 acres Greene owns next to the city and county land. It is being championed by Ross, whose Related Ross owns CityPlace, where it is building two office towers to complement its ownership of several other signature downtown office buildings.
Ross attended Monday鈥檚 event but did not speak. In an August 2024 appearance before the Palm Beach County Commission, Ross touted Vanderbilt for cementing Palm Beach鈥檚 place as 鈥渢he most important county in this country.鈥
鈥淭o do that, you need to have great schools. There鈥檚 no place that鈥檚 ever grown that doesn鈥檛 have great universities,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 equate this to really what occurred in the growth of Silicon Valley, where you had Stanford, you had all the money that was coming from San Francisco, and that created Silicon Valley and brought those great companies, those startups that started there and grew to be the giants in our country.鈥
This story was originally published by , a SA国际传谋 News partner.