Dan Cook appointed University architect and vice president for facilities design and operations

The University of Notre Dame has appointed Dan Cook as its new University architect and vice president for facilities design and operations.
A 1996 Notre Dame alumnus, Cook succeeds Doug Marsh, who served as the inaugural University architect and will continue as a key leader of the facilities design and operations team through May.
Cook joined Notre Dame on Jan. 27 from the University of Texas at Austin, where he had served as the executive director of planning, design and construction since 2021.
“Dan is an accomplished architect and visionary leader who has a deep connection to Notre Dame, making him ideally suited for this position,” University President Rev. Robert A. Dowd, C.S.C.., said. “I am confident he will be an excellent steward of our campus, ensuring our natural environment and facilities contribute in meaningful ways to our mission as a global Catholic research university. I look forward to working closely with him in the years to come.”
As vice president and University architect, Cook will lead the planning, design and construction of new campus facilities, as well as the renovation, maintenance, utilities, landscape services and facilities information for more than 200 buildings and 1,000 acres of campus grounds. He will continue to further Notre Dame’s goal of achieving carbon neutrality by 2050 in partnership with Assistant Vice President for Utilities and Maintenance Paul Kempf.
“I am thrilled to welcome Dan Cook back to Our Lady’s University. His leadership, architectural experience, humility and passion for our mission are tremendous assets for Notre Dame,” Executive Vice President Shannon Cullinan said. “Building upon the tradition of excellence established by Doug Marsh, under Dan’s leadership our Facilities Design and Operations Division will reach new heights in innovation, collaboration with campus partners, and efficiency.”
At the University of Texas, Cook led a team of 200 professionals responsible for planning, design, construction, project management, contracting and construction operations for more than 20 million square feet of facilities.
Prior to his role at Texas, he completed a 24-year career in the U.S. Navy, with deployments in Europe, Africa, Cuba and the Middle East. Cook held multiple positions of executive leadership with responsibility for planning, design, construction, utility systems operations, facility services, maintenance and energy solutions. During his last Naval assignment as commanding officer for a construction battalion, Cook guided a team of 1,200 personnel based on an 11-acre campus in San Diego.
Cook earned a bachelor’s degree from Notre Dame’s School of Architecture and a Master of Science in construction engineering and management from Purdue University. He holds a license to practice architecture in Indiana and is the recipient of the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star and numerous other personal awards and accolades.
Cook is married to Emily Husted Cook, a Notre Dame alumna. Together, they are the parents of seven children, four of whom have attended Notre Dame. He is originally from Oklahoma City.
Latest ND NewsWire
- New homelessness prevention toolkit empowers communities with proven, cost-effective way to keep families housedA new homelessness prevention toolkit is now available to help cities and counties across the country take a proactive approach to reducing homelessness. Developed through a collaboration among Notre Dame's Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO), Results for America and Destination: Home, this toolkit equips communities with a data-driven approach to keep families housed and avoid the costly and disruptive consequences of homelessness.
- Legacy in preservation: Notre Dame safeguards irreplaceable manuscriptsHow a relationship born out of the Cold War made the Hesburgh Libraries an essential destination for medieval research Each year, 1.3 million people visit the archaeological marvel Stonehenge. As one of the most famous prehistoric monuments in the world, it showcases a remarkable…
- Lucy Family Institute, Health Department identify youth vaping intervention strategies for St. Joseph CountyThe University of Notre Dame’s Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society and the St. Joseph County Department of Health partnered to evaluate and design technology-based interventions that call attention to the risks of e-cigarette use in young adults.
- Notre Dame Law School professor publishes largest-ever study of criminal cases in which the government hid evidenceNew research from the University of Notre Dame provides the largest-ever examination of Brady violations and offers a detailed and nuanced understanding of who suppresses material evidence in criminal cases as well as why, how, where and how often.
- Podcast: Advancing Rare Disease Research and Patient AdvocacyNotre Dame researchers are advancing rare disease research and patient advocacy, driving groundbreaking discoveries to bring hope to patients and families. …
- The New Yorker’s Jonathan Blitzer to speak at Notre Dame on how immigration became a political crisisThe Klau Institute for Civil and Human Rights is bringing The New Yorker’s Jonathan Blitzer to campus for an in-depth discussion about immigration. His talk will take place at 4 p.m. on Feb. 26 (Wednesday) in the auditorium of the Hesburgh Center for International Studies. The event is free and open to the general public; no tickets are required.