Change

November 1st, 2008 by laura

It’s amazing how quickly things change.

I was thinking that a couple of weeks ago when I was at UNLV preparing for an alumni event. I graduated from UNLV two and a half years ago now, but so much about the campus has changed in just that short amount of time.

There’s a new, shiny-looking student union– so much different than the small building I could walk through very quickly that had only a couple of places to eat, a tiny arcade and some seating areas. The one I went to almost daily is gone now.

There’s also a new engineering building, also much larger than what was there before. I haven’t been through it yet (no reason to), but I have seen it from the outside. It looks so foreign sitting there. My memories of UNLV don’t include that building.

And, most exciting and jealous-inducing of all for me is the new urban affairs building. Beautiful, big and modern, that building holds all the possibilities I dreamed of when I was a journalism student at UNLV: convergence labs for future journalists to learn about the full spectrum of media possibilities; TV studios big enough to rival any in the state; classrooms with plenty of interactivity; real offices for professors… so much that I didn’t have when I was a student there. And only two years later.

This type of change is not uncommon in all of Las Vegas. Whenever my friend David visits, there’s always a point when we’re driving along and we pass something he hasn’t seen. That happened fairly frequently after her returned from his mission with the LDS church, which was again two years long.

I suppose I take for granted somewhat how quickly things go up here. When I moved to the master-planned community where I live now, many of my friends who had gone off to college hadn’t even heard of the place. The area I live in is a booming part of town, but there are still wide open spaces.

When I moved into my house, there was a massive dirt lot across the street. Not two months ago, construction started popping up. A condo complex is going in, as is a strip mall with a much-needed grocery store. It seems like every week some business is opening within walking distance that I have been anticipating: a Dunkin Donuts, a sushi restaurant, a clothing boutique, a couple of pizza places, a 7-eleven. This week, I found out an ice cream place is a one-  to two-minute walk from my front door.

The good thing is that, for the most part, a lot of these things aren’t replacing something else, but are being built on existing land. At UNLV, the engineering and urban affairs buildings replaced parking. The student union replaced the existing building and some more parking (don’t know where all those cars are going).

As I am getting older and more sentimental, I find that I am sad at how quickly the scenery changes. I’m happy for the new possibilities, but I’m a little sad that something can change so quickly. The UNLV my sister may attend looks so much different from the UNLV I attended.

Posted in life, memories, school

One Response

  1. zobell

    Your comments remind of “Sunday in the Park with George,” when George’s mother mourns the loss of a field to a new structure (that the audience knows would turn out to be the Eiffel Tower.) “Pretty isn’t beautiful, mother, pretty is what changes. What the eye arranges, is what is beautiful…I’m changing, you’re changing, I’ll draw us both before we fade.”

    It seems the growth in Vegas is steadily declining. There are fewer and fewer surprises. That’s in part to the wretched economy, no doubt.

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