HOUSTON – (July 27, 2009)
– Texas Children's Hospital today became the first Texas Medical
Center (TMC) institution to lease space in Rice University's new
BioScience Research Collaborative (BRC), a place where scientists
and educators from the university and TMC institutions will work
together to perform leading research that benefits human medicine
and health.
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Mark A. Wallace, Texas
Children's Hospital president and CEO, participated in a
signing ceremony with Rice University President David
Leebron to celebrate Texas Children's new space in Rice's
BioScience Research Collaborative (BRC). |
Conceptualized and built
by Rice, the 477,000-square-foot BRC is equipped for cutting-edge
laboratory, theoretical and computational investigations and
features eight floors of research labs, classrooms and auditoriums.
It is designed to eventually accommodate a visualization center and
an entire floor dedicated to biomedical informatics.
“We believe that this building and the collaborative work that it
will foster between Rice and other institutions of the TMC will
provide a new impetus to the leadership in medical research of the
Texas Medical Center," Rice University President David Leebron said.
"Texas Children’s Hospital, with its strong commitment to medical
research as well as teaching and health delivery, has become an
increasingly important partner for Rice, and we are immensely
pleased to enter this new and deeper phase of working together. With
better and more integrative research facilities that enable
researchers and doctors to work more closely together across
disciplines and institutions, we can be confident in our ability to
be leaders in contributing to new breakthroughs in medical
treatments that will benefit people not only here in Houston, but
across the globe.”
Ranked among the
top 10 best children's hospitals by U.S. News &
World Report, Texas Children's will lease space on the eighth floor
of the 10-story BRC for 10 years, with an option to renew up to 40
years. Because the space is still under construction, dates for
occupancy have not been finalized.
"Texas Children's Hospital is proud to be the very first partner of
the BRC, this amazing venture that will provide the catalyst for new
discoveries in medical research, right here in Houston -- at the
heart of the Texas Medical Center," said Mark A. Wallace, Texas
Children's president and CEO.
The BRC is designed to facilitate joint research between Rice's
experts in biological sciences, engineering, computation, and the
physical and mathematical sciences and the Texas Medical Center
medical physicians and scientists.
Several Rice researchers have already moved their labs into the BRC,
including Professors Vicki Colvin and John McDevitt, both of whom
are exploring the use of nanotechnology in health care. Colvin and
her research group are currently investigating ways to make
nanoparticles safer in medical applications, among other endeavors.
As part of his work in nanohealth, McDevitt and his group are
testing a new "nano-bio-chip" system that diagnoses heart attacks,
cancer and HIV status by testing a person's saliva or blood.
Although patients will not be treated at the BRC, they will benefit
from new treatments developed there by researchers, physicians and
scientists, Leebron said. For example, nanobiotechnology is expected
to be used increasingly to design noninvasive treatments for
diseases that now require surgery.
"Progress and leadership in biomedicine and biotechnology now
depends on very close interplay between the areas of basic
scientific research centered primarily in university science and
engineering departments and the areas of modern biomedical science
centered primarily in medical schools and research hospitals," said
Eugene Levy, Rice provost. "Working together in a center designed
for collaboration and so ideally situated to unleash the power of
multidisciplinary scientific collaboration, colleagues from Rice
University and TMC institutions will be vastly better positioned for
the breakthroughs that will define bioscience and biomedical
progress in the 21st century. It is especially thrilling to have
Texas Children’s Hospital joining Rice in this exciting adventure.
Texas Children’s is unsurpassed in the distinction of its healthcare
delivery and leading-edge biomedical research."
Levy noted that, while there are other multidisciplinary research
buildings, the BRC is special because it is also designed to be
multi-institutional. “Its position at the center of the combined
Rice–TMC campus gives the BRC a rare capacity to house researchers
from a variety of disciplines and institutions, and to serve as a
catalytic environment for groundbreaking research,” he said.
“Although the BRC will foster programs and events specifically aimed
at promoting collaborations, frequently it is an impromptu
conversation over a cup of coffee that sparks new and productive
directions of research.”
The largest building project that Rice has ever undertaken, the BRC
houses a 280-seat auditorium, a 100-seat seminar room, classrooms
and 10,000 square feet of retail space for a restaurant and shops,
as well as three levels of underground parking. The site includes
the potential for adding a second research tower that could add
another 150,000 gross square feet.
Designed by Skidmore Owings and Merrill and constructed by Linbeck,
the BRC meets the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
standards developed by the U.S. Green Building Council. The BRC's
sustainable design features include: an air-quality monitoring
system that will enable significant energy savings in cooling and
heating labs; a vegetated "green" roof that will reduce storm-water
runoff and energy consumption; condensate water produced by the
air-handling units will be captured and piped to Rice's South Plant
for use in its cooling tower; and groundwater pumped from beneath
the parking garage will be used to irrigate the baseball field at
Reckling Park. In addition, approximately 75 percent of the
building’s construction waste is being recycled.
Parts of the BRC remain under construction. Over the next several
months, more Rice research teams will make the move, including the
rest of Rice's Department of Bioengineering, the Institute of
Biosciences and Bioengineering, Beyond Traditional Borders, Rice
360°, the Texas-UK Collaborative Research Initiative and the Center
for Biological and Environmental Nanotechnology. The Gulf Coast
Consortia, which represents researchers in six TMC institutions,
will also move to the BRC early next year.
Negotiations are under way with several other TMC institutions about
leasing space in the BRC. For more information about the BRC and a
full list of researchers who will be housed there, visit
www.rice.edu/brc.
About Rice University
Located in Houston, Rice University is consistently ranked one
of America's best teaching and research universities. Known for its
"unconventional wisdom," Rice is distinguished by its: size -- 3,102
undergraduates and 2,237 graduate students; selectivity -- 12
applicants for each place in the freshman class; resources -- an
undergraduate student-to-faculty ratio of 5-to-1; sixth largest
endowment per student among American private research universities;
residential college system, which builds communities that are both
close-knit and diverse; and collaborative culture, which crosses
disciplines, integrates teaching and research, and intermingles
undergraduate and graduate work. For more information, visit
www.rice.edu.
About Texas Children's Hospital
Texas Children's Hospital is committed to a community of healthy
children by providing the finest pediatric patient care, education
and research. Renowned worldwide for its expertise and breakthrough
developments in clinical care and research, Texas Children’s is
ranked in the top ten best children’s hospitals by U.S. News and
World Report. Texas Children’s also operates the nation’s largest
primary pediatric care network, with over 40 offices throughout the
greater Houston community. Texas Children’s has embarked on a $1.5
Billion expansion, Vision 2010, which includes a Neurological
Research Institute, a comprehensive obstetrics facility focusing on
high risk births, and a community hospital in suburban West Houston.
For more information, visit
www.texaschildrens.org.