The B-School announced today that they’d received a $100 million donation from businessman and philanthropist Ron Perelman.
Perelman is part of the Board of Overseers for the B-School and serves as CEO and chairman of MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings Inc., which that owns a ton of corporations—including the Revlon make-up company and Scantron, the company that makes those standardized tests that require a number 2 pencil.
Perelman’s $100 million will go toward building the B-School’s two new buildings in Manhattanville, one of which will be named the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation, “in recognition of [his] generosity.” The other building will be named after Henry Kravis, B ’69 and co-chair of the Board Overseers, who made his own $100 million donation last year.
No word on whether either of the buildings will be restricted to undergrads. But as of this writing, http://undergradsinperelman.tumblr.com is still available.
The full press release:
Columbia Business School announced today that Ronald O. Perelman, Chairman and CEO of MacAndrews & Forbes Holdings Inc. and a member of the School’s Board of Overseers, has pledged $100 million to Columbia Business School. The gift will be used to develop a new facility that will strengthen the School’s innovations and programs that are creating the next generation of global business leaders.
“We are grateful for Ronald O. Perelman’s generosity to the University,” said Columbia President Lee C. Bollinger. “His major gift will not only benefit future generations of Columbia Business School students, but a wider University community in which a dynamic business education must play a vital role in the broader academic mission. Our world has been changed by the global marketplace, so business schools and universities must respond with new thinking and new structures for learning about our economy and society. The Perelman Center will be part of an interdisciplinary and environmentally sustainable urban campus that will help define Columbia’s next century.”
In recognition of Mr. Perelman’s generosity, the Business School will name one of its two buildings on the new campus the Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation.
“The business landscape is changing rapidly and dramatically, and as such the principles that define strong business leadership — such as an entrepreneurial mindset and solving complex challenges — are more important now than ever before,” said Mr. Perelman. “It is our responsibility to ensure that we are building a generation of great business leaders who drive success in an ever-changing, competitive global economy, and I believe Columbia Business School has its finger on the pulse of the changing nature of business education.I am extraordinarily pleased to pledge this gift to help them prepare the next generation of business leaders for 21st century challenges.”
Perelman has been a longtime and devoted member of the Columbia Business School community, serving on its Board of Overseers since 1994. He is an active philanthropist who believes powerful results can be achieved when financial resources are leveraged with human resolve. Perelman has established the Revlon/UCLA Women’s Cancer Research Program, the Ronald O. Perelman Department of Dermatology at New York University Langone Medical Center, the Ronald O. Perelman Heart Institute at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, and the Ronald O. Perelman and Claudia Cohen Center for Reproductive Medicine at Weill Cornell Medical Center. He serves on the boards of the New York University Langone Medical Center, New York-Presbyterian Hospital, Weill Cornell Medical Center, Ford’s Theater, Apollo Theater Foundation, and Carnegie Hall.
“Throughout the past four decades Ronald has proven himself to be one of the most accomplished investors and philanthropists of his time. He displays the type of instinct and insight that are hallmarks of a true leader — the very same traits that we seek to instill in our students here at Columbia Business School,” said Glenn Hubbard, Dean of Columbia Business School. “The Perelman Center will allow Columbia Business School to continue pioneering breakthroughs in management education, such as moving beyond functional expertise or siloed learning and ensuring a more integrated curriculum for our students. It will help us create the classrooms of tomorrow and foster an even greater collaborative spirit among recruiters, students, alumni, and faculty members, paving the way for a stronger network and more meaningful outcomes for our community.”
Hubbard continued: “We have always had the talent, ideas, curriculum, research, and community of a stellar business school. Soon, thanks to Ronald’s generosity and that of our other donors, we will have the facilities to match. On behalf of the students, faculty, staff, and graduates of Columbia Business School, I would like to express our sincere gratitude to Ronald for his generous gift.”
The two new Business School buildings on the Manhattanville campus will be designed by renowned New York architecture firm Diller Scofidio + Renfro and will reflect the fast-paced, high-tech, and highly social character of business in the 21st century. The facilities will encompass more than 450,000 square feet and will offer multifunctional spaces that foster a sense of community — spaces where students, faculty members, alumni, and practitioners can gather to exchange ideas. The Ronald O. Perelman Center for Business Innovation will be situated opposite The Henry R. Kravis Building, which is named in recognition of a generous 2010 gift made by alumnus Henry R. Kravis ’69.
Weirder version of Lerner via B-school press release
7 Comments
@this looks like the aborted fetus of Lerner boning Diana
@Anonymous looks like the diana’s grandfather. legit though.
@Anonymous Everyone is still waiting for Warren Buffets donation B’51.
@AKA The Hellboy Center for Business Innovation
@Ron Perelman HELLBOY IS THAT YOU?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Perlman
@This Is the kind of Bwog reporting I’ve been missing. Well done, A+.
As a side note, any idea when the Manhattanville expansion is slated to be finished?
@alum “Manhattanville” refers to Columbia’s new expansion campus just north of Morningside. A total of 18 new buildings are slated to built on the almost 18 acre site over the next two decades. The first buildings to open will be the Jerome L. Greene Center for Mind, Brain and Behavior in early 2016, followed by the Lenfest Center for the Arts, and a university conference center. The new Business School buildings right now are slated to be completed around 2016-17. (The medical school also has a new education building under constuction that is also slated to be completed in the 2016-17 time frame.)