Southern University is making history in Baton Rouge, and the rest of the country is paying attention. The flagship HBCU of the Southern University System recently celebrated a landmark moment in the construction of its $68 million STEM Complex, marking the ceremonial topping-out of the facility after the final structural beam was placed atop the building. It is the kind of milestone that does not just signal construction progress — it signals something far more powerful for the future of Southern University, its students, and the broader HBCU community nationwide.
The complex, fully funded through Louisiana’s Capital Outlay Act, represents one of the most significant infrastructure investments in Southern University’s history. University leaders say the project will expand opportunity and innovation for current and future students, positioning the institution to meet the growing national demand for STEM professionals. For an HBCU that has long been a cornerstone of Black higher education in Louisiana, the new facility is both a practical upgrade and a profound statement of purpose.
Southern University Builds Something Bigger Than a Building
The numbers alone are impressive. The new Southern University STEM Complex will span between 86,000 and 94,000 square feet across three stories, housing 21 laboratories and 16 classrooms. The facility will support undergraduate programs in biology, chemistry, mathematics, physics, and computer sciences, as well as a doctoral program in science and mathematics education. Every inch of the space has been designed with modern instructional standards in mind, featuring flexible lab configurations, integrated technology and audiovisual systems, and collaborative common areas built to encourage student engagement and extended study time.
The building will also include dedicated faculty and administrative spaces, along with food service areas — including a coffee shop — making it a true hub for academic life on the Southern University campus. Construction is being led by LEMOINE | Luster, a joint venture team that replaced the former James Hall to make way for the new complex.
What This Means for HBCU STEM Education
Historically Black colleges and universities have long punched above their weight in producing Black graduates in STEM fields, and Southern University has been a major part of that story for decades. The new STEM Complex is expected to significantly accelerate that impact dramatically. University officials believe the upgraded facilities and expanded research opportunities will not only attract new students to Southern University but also improve overall retention and graduation rates — a critical factor in long-term student success and workforce readiness nationwide.
Southern University leaders have been clear that this historic investment is not just about bricks and mortar. The University STEM Complex is strategically designed to firmly position the Baton Rouge institution as a recognized national leader in science and innovation, capable of confidently competing with any university in the country when it comes to STEM education infrastructure and advanced research capacity.
A 2027 Opening and a Future Worth Watching
The Southern University STEM Complex is projected to open in 2027, allowing time for final equipment installations, faculty planning, and full academic programming. The topping-out ceremony brought together university administrators, construction partners, and community stakeholders to mark the occasion, with officials sharing detailed plans for how the building will be used once it officially opens its doors to students.
For a university that has called Baton Rouge home since 1914 and educated generations of Black scholars across Louisiana and beyond, the completion of the Southern University STEM Complex will represent far more than a construction achievement. It will be a declaration — loud, unmistakable, and long overdue — that Southern University and the ambitious students it proudly serves are ready to confidently lead the next chapter of American innovation.

