BOCA RATON, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2025) — You don’t need a glossy magazine to see how much Lynn’s changed. You can feel it pulling off Military Trail. The place just looks… different.
Eight years ago, they pitched something called Lynn 2025: Design for the Future. Big talk at the time. Now it’s done. And honestly, they did most of what they said they would.
President Kevin Ross says it straight in this year’s issue: “Together, we earned national recognition as one of the most innovative universities in the country.” It doesn’t sound like PR when you’re standing in front of all the new buildings.
The numbers look solid.
Enrollment’s up 14 percent. Retention climbed six points. Graduation up ten. That’s steady, not luck. Gareth Fowles, who runs enrollment, told the magazine it comes down to staying focused on students: “Families believe in what we’re offering.”
That seems true. The place feels more alive.
The campus grew up.
Banyan Residence Hall opened this year. 287 beds. Firepit. Classroom. Lounges where people actually hang out. Before that, Capstone Apartments came online. Together, more than 600 new spots on campus.
The Snyder Center for Health and Wellness is packed. Fitness classes upstairs, counseling and check-ins down the hall. “Having a facility dedicated to students’ well-being is paramount,” said Anthony Altieri, who oversees student life.
Walk in there at lunch hour. It’s busy. It’s not just for show.
Classes work different now.
During COVID, they switched to a block schedule — four-week classes, one or two at a time. It stuck. “Many students learn better this way,” said Mike Petroski, the guy who helped set it up. Grades improved. Fewer withdrawals. People could breathe again.
The tech side caught up too. Workday runs everything now. Navigate360 keeps students from slipping through the cracks. Blueprint handles involvement and leadership stuff.
Next comes Blueprint Rewards — payoffs for showing up. Real money. Up to $6,750 in scholarships and perks. “The more effort you put in, the more you get out,” Altieri said.
Money followed the momentum.
The endowment jumped from $26 million to $45 million. Nine new endowed scholarships added last year alone. Faculty legends got their names on a few — Ralph Norcio, Mike Perez, Robert Watson.
Lisa Miller, from advancement, said donors “believe deeply in the mission.” And clearly, they’re still writing checks.
Even big names joined in. Karen Lynch, the former CVS CEO, and her husband Kevin gave $5 million to support leadership programs. “If you can focus on what makes you unique, you’ll go far,” she said.
Sports exploded.
New fields, new equipment, roughly $10 million in upgrades. Two national titles in one day last year — men’s soccer and women’s volleyball. That kind of thing sticks.
Perez, Lynn’s longtime tennis coach, summed it up: “Facilities don’t win you matches, but they raise the bar.”
Even Manchester City trained on Lynn’s field before the Club World Cup, left behind a perfect pitch, and some bragging rights.
Outside the gates, same push.
Students shooting content in the new BrandStar studio. Interning with Related Ross downtown. Volunteering through the Social Impact Lab. The Citizenship Project still gets freshmen out into the community before midterms.
And Lynn’s quietly building partnerships overseas — even custom programs for the Broward Sheriff’s Office and Dart Enterprises in the Caymans.
Eight years. That’s the story.
A small university went all in on a plan. It built, it adjusted, it modernized. It actually finished what it started.
Ross closed his note with one line: “Every achievement fuels the next.”
It fits. The place doesn’t feel like it’s slowing down.
You can see the difference standing in the courtyard, hearing music from the dorms, watching students move between new buildings that didn’t even exist when the plan started.
Lynn 2025 wasn’t just talk. It landed.
For more, read the 2025 Lynn magazine.

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