Jim Moran Building Wins Distinguished Design Award

 

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - The innovative renovation of Florida State University’s new entrepreneurship-focused Jim Moran Building has won a prestigious design award recognizing architectural features that nurture learning and imagination.

The American Institute of Architects in Florida has presented its Merit Award of Excellence for Renovations and Additions to the project’s architects. The award commended Architects Lewis + Whitlock for transforming the 19th-century building in downtown Tallahassee into a state-of-the-art home for entrepreneurial education.

“The Jim Moran Building was designed as a tribute to the long-standing legacy of automotive pioneer Jim Moran,” said Randy Blass, executive director of the Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship. “The space is designed to encourage both entrepreneurs and students to explore ideas and bring them to life. From this building, the next generation of legacies will be born.”

 

The American Institute of Architects in Florida noted several design elements that enhanced the facility’s form and function. It was designed to operate as an “urban hub,” where students and entrepreneurs could connect with business mentors, faculty members and financial resources.

The look and feel of the airy three-story space reflect the enthusiastic spirit and dynamic success of entrepreneur and philanthropist Jim Moran.

His career had humble beginnings in Chicago. Moran worked hard and saved his money until he was able to buy a Sinclair gas station for $360 in 1939. He turned the business into the city’s automotive sales leader with a pledge to treat customers right. That positive attitude earned him recognition as “Jim Moran the Courtesy Man,” and it paved the way for a career in the auto industry that spanned more than six decades.

Now, Moran’s inspiring quotes and a timeline of his life story are displayed prominently throughout the 20,000-square-foot Jim Moran Building located near the state Capitol.

The design team had three main goals for the facility: connect people in creative ways, inspire future entrepreneurs and promote transparency to align with Moran’s personal business philosophy.

“We’ve taken that idea of transparency, literally, in the building,” said M. Hays Layerd, formerly of Architects Lewis + Whitlock, at a ribbon-cutting ceremony in May. “You see glass walls wherever possible. The fronts and backs of the building are glass to allow light and views to permeate through. We want everything to be open. We want to be open to the community, so people have a visual connection, understanding that the entrepreneurial process is not hidden or done in private. You really need to connect with people.”

FSU President John Thrasher described the Jim Moran Building as a jewel for the university and a welcoming space that will serve generations of students.

“They want to come to a place where they know they can follow their hopes and dreams,” Thrasher said, “where they can accomplish the goals they set for themselves, where faculty will help them and where this great community will support them.”

 

About the Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship
The Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship cultivates, trains and inspires entrepreneurial leaders through world-class executive education, applied training, public recognition and leading-edge research. Jim Moran was an automotive pioneer and an entrepreneur at heart, who at the age of 7, sold soda pop at sandlot baseball games in Chicago. With a career that spanned more than six decades, he built an amazing chronicle of achievements in the automobile industry. His vision for the Jim Moran Institute was to provide opportunities that would help others become more successful business owners. A 1995 contribution from Jim and Jan Moran and JM Family Enterprises established the Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship at the Florida State University College of Business. Since 2011, further enhancements to the Jim Moran Institute and its outreach have been made possible by Jan Moran and The Jim Moran Foundation.