NEW ORLEANS (BP) – The board of trustees at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College approved a $12 million plan to make critical campus renovations including updates to student housing, the cafeteria and the student center during its spring meeting April 12-13.
In addition, the board voted to rename the student center in honor of Fred Luter, pastor of Franklin Avenue Baptist Church (FABC) in New Orleans. The renewed cafeteria will be named in memory of Landrum P. Leavell II.
Jamie Dew, president of New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and Leavell College, shared the news of the student center naming with Fred Luter and the members of FABC on Easter Sunday.
“Proverbs chapter three verse number 27 says this: ‘Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due when it is in your power to do so,” Dew said during the naming announcement. “Pastor Luter, you are clearly a man to whom honor is due and it is within our power to do so.”
The newly renamed Fred Luter Jr. Student Center (LSC) interior restoration is nearing completion after more than a year of work. Trustees also approved much-needed exterior upgrades to the student center to beautify the campus entrance and improve the center’s functionality. The updates include additional interior renovations, outdoor seating areas, landscaping and parking lot repairs.
The LSC renovations were funded by a $2 million anonymous gift. A gift of that size includes naming rights for the building, Dew said. In consultation with the NOBTS administration, the donor chose to recognize Luter’s humble and faithful service in New Orleans and throughout the Southern Baptist Convention by naming the building in his honor.
During the presentation, Dew recounted how he began listening to Luter’s sermons shortly after becoming a believer and how Luter made an impression on him.
“When you watch someone from afar, you have an impression about who they are and what they are. And you know how this goes, sometimes when you get to meet these people in real life, they are not who you thought they would be,” Dew said. “Brother, you are not only everything I thought you were, you are more. We love you.”
A video of Dew’s announcement at Franklin Avenue Baptist Church is available here.
Luter, called as Franklin Avenue’s pastor in 1986, helped the struggling, 65-member congregation grow to one of the largest Southern Baptist churches in Louisiana. During his 36-year tenure as FABC pastor, Luter has become an important voice for the cause of Christ in the city of New Orleans and an ardent supporter of the seminary’s work. In 2012, Luter was elected as the first African American president of the SBC and served two terms in that role.
In addition to the LSC improvements and naming, the multi-year campus renovation plan approved by the trustees calls for the complete renovation of student housing units and updates to essential public buildings such as the cafeteria. The project also includes the construction of one new faculty home. The updates will include numerous ADA accessibility features to better serve the campus community.
The cornerstone of the plan is a $5 million update to the cafeteria, which will include a 4,000-square-foot addition, new meeting rooms, new bathrooms, an elevator and a mezzanine. The phased construction and remodeling of the cafeteria will begin in May.
In addition to the updates and new features, the cafeteria will receive a new name. Trustees voted to name the cafeteria the Landrum Leavell Dining Hall in memory of Landrum P. Leavell II. Leavell, the seminary’s seventh president, led NOBTS for 20 years with a singular focus on training men and women for kingdom work. This essential community and conferencing space on the campus quad will honor his legacy on campus.
Close to $4.5 million will be spent remodeling and updating student housing including the addition of eight new apartments in the former Shepherd’s Corner building. Many of the apartments covered in the renovation plan were built when the NOBTS campus relocated to Gentilly. While the structures are sound, updates and repairs are needed. The most extensive repair and restoration work will be in Willingham Manor (married student apartments). Willingham foyers, hallways, stairwells, and apartments will be remodeled. Apartments will receive new appliances as well as plumbing and electrical updates.
Campus dorms and the Lipsey/Dement/Crutcher apartments will receive significant updates to common spaces such as foyers, hallways, and stairwells. Common rooms and areas in the dorms also will be renovated, and the Courtyard Apartments will receive new furniture.
Other campus improvements include an elevator and exterior updates for the Frost Building and a new meeting space on the second floor of the student center.
In addition to the $2 million anonymous gift, the remainder of the project will be funded by private donations, the NOBTS Foundation, an insurance settlement related to Hurricane Ida, and an investment by the Providence Housing Corporation.