| [April 19, 2012] |
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$130 Million USTAR Interdisciplinary Research Facility Dedicated at The University of Utah
SALT LAKE CITY --(Business Wire)--
The University of Utah (UofU) and the USTAR Governing Authority today
cut the ribbon on a $130 million, sustainably designed interdisciplinary
research facility, aimed at attracting some of the world's most
internationally recognized faculty and fueling Utah's economic
development activity.
The James L. Sorenson Molecular Biotechnology Building - A USTAR
Innovation Center, was funded through a $100 million commitment from the
state of Utah along with private gifts, among them $15 million from the
Sorenson Legacy Foundation and $1.25 million from the Micron Technology (News - Alert)
Foundation. "We are pleased that the building bears the name of one of
Utah's most innovative and successful biomedical pioneers, James LeVoy
Sorenson," said David W. Pershing, University of Utah president.
State funding comes from the USTAR (Utah Science Technology and
Research) Initiative, a long-term economic development initiative that
promotes world-class research facilities and research teams. USTAR is
helping to create new technologies that can be commercialized,
generating more technology-based start-up firms, higher-paying jobs and
additional business activity all aimed at expanding Utah's tax base.
The James L. Sorenson Molecular Biotechnology Building - A USTAR
Innovation Center, which was designed to achieve LEED Gold certification
from the U.S. Green Building Council, has been designed by architecture
firm Lord, Aeck & Sargent's Atlanta office in association with Prescott
Muir Architects in Salt Lake City.
A New Era of Interdisciplinary Translational Research
"The building site both physically ad academically unites the health
sciences with main campus. Through the USTAR initiative we are crossing
traditional boundaries to accelerate research at the interfaces of
medicine, pharmacy, engineering, computer science and life sciences,"
said Dinesh Patel, managing director at vSpring Capital and chairman of
the USTAR Governing Authority.
The 208,000-square-foot building houses senior faculty researchers, plus
junior faculty, administrative and laboratory personnel. The building
contains both flexible, open-bench research laboratories as well as
specialty core research facilities for biomedical microscopy,
engineering microscopy, and nano-fabrication. Open lab space has
adjacent closed equipment rooms and nearby office space for the
principal investigators. The flexible laboratories and their core
support labs are designed to support the collaboration of scientists in
many disciplines with the most sophisticated scientific tools and
equipment.
The energy-efficient facility is setting a high standard for sustainable
design that will reduce both energy use and energy costs from current
laboratory code requirements by a minimum of 40 percent.
Benchmarks of Progress
To date, The University of Utah has successfully recruited 33
high-profile researchers through the USTAR initiative, from universities
such as Harvard, UCLA and Brown, in clusters ranging from nanomaterials,
nanomedicine and drug delivery, to genetics, bioimage analysis and the
neurobiology of developmental disorders.
USTAR's full impact will be realized when new research teams
commercialize innovative technologies and products. From inception
through the end of FY11, the University of Utah's USTAR faculty leaders
have generated nearly $76 million in grants, with more than $80 million
in research proposals pending. Through FYI, USTAR teams have had 146
invention disclosures and patent filings.
About USTAR
The Utah Science Technology and Research Initiative (USTAR) is a
long-term, state-funded investment to strengthen Utah's "knowledge
economy" and generate high-paying jobs. Funded in March 2006 by the
State Legislature, USTAR is based on three program areas. The first area
involves funding for strategic investments at the University of Utah and
Utah State University to recruit world-class researchers. The second
area is to build state-of-the-art interdisciplinary facilities at these
institutions for the innovation teams. The third program area involves
teams that work with companies and entrepreneurs across the state to
promote science, innovation and commercialization activities. For more
information, go to www.innovationutah.com
or follow http://twitter.com/Innovationutah.

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