November’s quarterly meeting of the Texas A&M system board of regents included action and discussion on nine building related projects.
After seven years of planning, construction will start soon on the new home of Texas A&M’s meat science and technology center. The $114 million dollar facility will be located on the RELLIS campus. The director of AgriLife Research, Cliff Lamb, said the complex is moving from its present location on Finfeather Road because no land was available in 2018 when they started planning. While substantial completion is expected in February 2028, the complex won’t open until the city of Bryan completes a sanitary sewer project that affects the entire RELLIS campus.
Approval was also given to a Texas A&M baseball player development center. The $28 million dollar project demolishes the current batting cage and replaces it with a more than 34,000 square foot building. Construction is scheduled to start in December 2025 and be completed in one year.
Approval was given to proceed with the $20.5 million dollar renovation of the 1041 building on Texas A&M’s west campus.
Click HERE to read and download background information about the 1041 building renovation.
Approval was given to proceed with the $9.4 million dollar HVAC replacement at Hart residence hall.
Click HERE to read and download background information about the Hart Hall HVAC replacement.
The regents moved up the start of construction on two buildings to this fiscal year. The west campus learning commons was scheduled to start in fiscal year 2028 and a third building for the Mays Business School was scheduled to start in fiscal year 2027.
The regents also held a discussion about future plans to add parking on the flagship campus to replace space that is or will be taken for the Aplin Center among other current and future projects. A&M’s chief operating officer Peter Lange said there is discussion for a ninth and tenth parking garage. One garage is on the university’s capital plan for west campus. And Lange says nine or ten possible sites have been identified for additional parking.
The regents also discussed moving the system’s audit office to a new location. Building committee chairman Randy Brooks of San Angelo said they are looking at a vacant A&M building in College Station on Texas near Dominik.
And the A&M system’s chief administrative officer, Joseph Duron, presented a new $100 million dollar demolition/deferred maintenance plan where all universities and agencies can apply. The first phase will pay for demolition, beginning with vacant buildings. The second phase will continue with demolition and will address deferred maintenance on a prioritization schedule.
Click below to hear comments from the November 13, 2025 board of regents meeting.


