The Wistar Institute’s New $100 Million Biomedical Research Facility: The Robert and Penny Fox Tower |
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September 30, 2014, Volume 61, No. 07 |
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The seven-story Robert and Penny Fox Tower on Spruce Street expanded the Wistar Institute's space for 'team science' biomedical research and scientific discoveries and added a new entrance.
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The Wistar Institute, an international leader in basic biomedical research, recently opened its new $100 million research building. The gala for the seven-story Robert and Penny Fox Tower ushered in a new era of team science and solidify Wistar’s future at the forefront of cancer research, genetics and vaccine development. Wistar is the nation’s first independent biomedical research institute and was Philadelphia’s first NCI-designated Cancer Center.
Wistar broke ground on the 89,700-square-foot expansion project in September 2011. The expansion provides five new floors of laboratory space and increases the potential number of labs from 30 to 45.
Each floor is designed as a large, state-of-the art, open-plan research lab that will enable four Wistar professors and their individual research groups to work collaboratively in scientific teams. This design has been demonstrated to foster greater problem solving and discovery in research.
“No longer is a laboratory simply a room where individual researchers toil at their benches,” said Russel E. Kaufman, Wistar president and CEO. “Science today requires space and infrastructure to foster open communication, to provide opportunities for researchers from widely different sets of knowledge and expertise to collaborate in order to tackle the scientific challenges of tomorrow. This ‘team science’ approach sparks scientific innovation and optimal results.”
The new tower is located on Spruce Street in the heart of Philadelphia’s University City and serves to unite the entire Wistar campus. It links to both the original 1894 facility (now known as the East Building) and the newly renovated 1975 Cancer Research Building (now known as the West Building).
Along with the latest testing and screening technologies, Wistar will now have the capacity to take discoveries even further toward providing therapeutic value and saving lives. The expansion will also enable Wistar to recruit new scientists.
“We cannot simply hit an innovation switch to bring about new medicines or discoveries, but what we can do is bring together motivated scientists from multiple fields and allow them to combine their expertise in ways that we cannot even foresee,” said Dario C. Altieri, Wistar’s chief scientific officer and director of Wistar’s Cancer Center.
“That has always been the Wistar way, and this building will enable collaborative science to occur on an even greater scale.”
A new public entrance on Spruce Street enhances Wistar’s outreach and visibility. Visitors travel through a sun-lit glass atrium to attend scientific lectures and public events in the new 200-seat, high-tech Sarah and Matthew Caplan Auditorium. Open public spaces throughout the building also enhance Wistar’s accessibility to the community, serving as a place where non-scientists of all ages can learn about human life and basic scientific research.
The expansion and renovation project also includes upgrades to aging infrastructure with new high-efficiency, energy saving heating, cooling, electrical and data systems.
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