Education

State budget has $185M to replace NC State’s Poe Hall. Work is underway on campus

Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the N.C. State campus Wednesday, July 8, 2026, in Raleigh, N.C. Workers wearing protective gear were seen inside and outside the building as the university moves forward with abatement and demolition. The building has been closed since 2023 after elevated levels of PCBs, toxic chemicals linked to health problems, including cancer, were found inside.
Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the N.C. State University campus July 8, 2026, in Raleigh, N.C. Workers wearing protective gear were seen inside and outside the building as the university moves forward with abatement and demolition. The building has been closed since 2023 after elevated levels of PCBs, toxic chemicals linked to health problems, including cancer, were found inside. rwillett@newsobserver.com
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  • NC State trustees voted unanimously to demolish Poe Hall and proceed with the project.
  • The state budget provides $185 million for demolition and eventual reconstruction.
  • A group of 12 and the university are both suing Monsanto over PCBs.

NC State University is officially demolishing Poe Hall, a building that’s caused the school, and its community, both headaches and heartbreaks.

The school’s board of trustees voted to move forward with the project Wednesday.

Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the N.C. State campus on Wednesday, July 8, 2026 in Raleigh, N.C. The structure was closed in 203 after high levels of PCB's, toxic chemicals that have been linked to health issues including cancer are found in the building.
Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the NC State University campus on Wednesday, July 8, 2026 in Raleigh, N.C. The structure was closed in 2023 after high levels of PCBs, toxic chemicals that have been linked to health issues including cancer, were found in the building. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

North Carolina’s long-awaited state budget provides $185 million for the demolition and eventual reconstruction of the building, which once housed NC State’s education department. Poe Hall is full of harmful chemicals known as PCBs — and a group of former occupants claim their time in the building is the cause of the cancer they later developed. A federal investigation found high levels of both chemicals and certain kinds of cancer, but couldn’t definitively link the two.

The budget was passed by the General Assembly and then signed into law by the governor last week.

The university has yet to share a timeline or detailed information on the demolition, which the federal Environmental Protection Agency approved this spring. The building is currently surrounded by dark fencing, with workers coming in and out of its back doors.

Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the N.C. State campus on Wednesday, July 8, 2026 in Raleigh, N.C. The structure was closed in 203 after high levels of PCB's, toxic chemicals that have been linked to health issues including cancer are found in the building.
Fencing surrounds Poe Hall on the NC State University campus on Wednesday, July 8, 2026 in Raleigh, N.C. The structure was closed in 2023 after high levels of PCB's, toxic chemicals that have been linked to health issues including cancer, were found in the building. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

While the demolition marks an important milestone, litigation against the school from a group of sickened people who once worked or studied in the building remains active. Both that group and the university are in turn suing Monsanto, the company that manufactured PCBs.

The insured value of Poe Hall is just under $50 million, according to Alicia Knight, senior associate vice chancellor of finance and administration at NC State.

Jane Winik Sartwell
The News & Observer
Jane Winik Sartwell covers higher education for The News & Observer. 
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