tnt said:
Its close. As much as 75 wants to blame this mess on RE, he simply can't. Its just one more of the many messes he inherited from Dennison. Recall a big part of the whole thing was Dennison basically wanting to "sub divide" the golf course. He wanted to build "condos" for all the rah rah boys wanting to relive their college days and live on "campus" to be closer to the wine and cheese parties for the in crowd.
Well, I attended the meetings at which RE was just baffled about the opposition to the tech campus on the golf course, and I know for a fact he had no idea that the land was restricted by the original deed. Did you notice I said that the project began under Dennison? But, it had only reached the "building proposal" phase -- an architects design of a proposed structure(s). Very early planning phase. More like a "thinking" phase. Money had not been requested from the legislature.
The condo project was the brainchild of Bob Duringer, UM's Financial VP. I knew Bob reasonably well, and he would call me in once in a while about this or that. The Condo project was certainly bad optics, but he had proposed using a part of the golf course on the extreme south end, fronting on Pattee Canyon Drive, which isn't actually used as part of the golf course, and is kind of a "no man's land," of just a place for storage and rough grass and bushes. It is immediately next to the urban interface of south Missoula and the traffic corridor and because of its extreme location, doesn't have a function as part of University activities, per se.
His idea was that "this is not being used for anything, we keep piling junk on it because it is excess space, and we can use it to generate some income." Bad idea? Good idea? It certainly wasn't the worst idea in the history of the University. It was hand-in-hand with the student housing development of Lewis & Clark Village, which did take part of the golf course proper, and which was perhaps the part that did get people more riled up, but it did actually get built as married student housing, which turned out pretty classy for U housing. So yes, that was an actual Dennison project.