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$20 Million Supports Second Science Building

:: There he goes again
:: Vanguard of institutions
 
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The university is in the vanguard of institutions advancing integrative science: discipline-spanning teams of leading professors and researchers exploring critical scientific frontiers.

“This project is extremely important to the state as well as the university,” Linton said. “By bringing our renowned cognitive neuroscientists into a research environment shared with their colleagues in other fields, we will sustain Oregon as a leader in advancing the understanding of the mind and brain and in translating that knowledge into improved human health and performance.”

Linton said a faculty committee would soon begin work on defining program priorities for Phase Two, a multi-story structure of up to 100,000 square feet. Plans call for state-of-the-art research labs, classrooms, and meeting space along with shared facilities for sophisticated instrumentation.

Meanwhile, other gifts and corporate leases are helping the College of Arts and Sciences complete the outfitting of Lokey Laboratories, which will open by the end of this year. Commitments to date include $400,000 from the Alice C. Tyler Perpetual Trust, $50,000 from Jeffery D. Loomis ’83 of San Francisco, and a three-year lease agreement valued at about $200,000 by Voxtel, Inc., of Beaverton, Oregon, for space in the Partnership Labs.

Lorry I. Lokey Laboratories is a signature research center associated with the Oregon Nanoscience and Microtechnologies Institute (ONAMI).

—Melody Ward Leslie

 


Integrative Science Complex.
Conceptual drawing of the interior laboratories to be housed within Lorry I. Lokey Laboratories.

“This project is extremely important to the state as well as the university.”

—Richard Linton, UO vice president for research and graduate studies



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