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Higher Education

University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center Planned

Published 1/25/2002

The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor has planned a new cardiovascular center, including educational, research and clinical components. Located on the university's main health science campus, the free-standing facility will be designed and programmed by Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott.

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SDSU Plans Sorority Housing

Published 1/25/2002

San Diego State University has contracted Steinberg Group of Los Angeles to design a 2000-unit, 6,000-student sorority housing project. Located on 1.56-acres, Sorority Row will accompany SDSU's current fraternity housing project in an effort to decrease traffic congestion and increase parking inventory, as underground parking for the housing developments frees up spaces in SDSU parking garages. Construction is slated to begin in 2002 with occupancy estimated for the summer of 2004.

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Dartmouth College Expansion In Design Phase

Published 1/25/2002

Dartmouth College has selected Cambridge, Mass.-based Bruner/Cott & Associates Inc. and Moore Ruble Yudell Architects & Planners of Santa Monica, Calif., to plan and design a major expansion of their Hanover, N.H. campus. Slated for completion in 2004, the project features a new mathematics hall, a dining hall, and dormitory facilities for 500 to 600 students.

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UC Berkeley Plans Albany Mixed-Use Campus

Published 1/10/2002

The University of California, Berkeley, has issued an RFQ for the transformation of 26 acres at its University Village in Albany to a $100-million, mixed-use residential and retail campus. The University hopes to begin construction by early 2003 at the site, where currently student and faculty housing, a community center, baseball fields, and university agricultural research space are located. The selected developer will be asked to improve the community center and baseball fields, build a child and infant care center, and protect as open space two creeks running through the site.

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Emory University Conserves Water in New Construction

Published 1/9/2002

 

Emory University has two buildings under construction that incorporate an innovative water recycling program. The system is designed to capture air-conditioning condensate for reuse by the cooling tower that provides air conditioning for a 325,000-sf medical research facility and a 268,000-sf cancer research institute. The $30,000 system will generate more than 2 million gallons a year of the 10- to 12 million gallons required by the tower. The system is expected to save water usage and sewer fees in the next three years that will cover its initial costs.

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Saginaw Valley State University Builds Regional Education Center

Published 1/9/2002

Saginaw Valley State University broke ground in October on a $30-million Regional Education Center. The 130,000-sf facility will serve the University’s faculty, undergraduate and graduate students, and K-12 educators and scholars. The Center houses 24 classrooms, two computer labs, a 250-seat capacity multi-media auditorium, 65 faculty offices, a student lounge, cyber café, and study areas. HarleyEllis, of Detroit, Mich., provided architecture, engineering, and planning services for the project. Spence Brothers of Saginaw, Mich., is the Construction Manager.

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University of Texas Plan Center to Study Aging

Published 1/9/2002

The University of Texas System is in the planning  process to build The Sam and Ann Barshop Center for Longevity and Aging Studies at UT’s Health Science Center in San Antonio. The research facility will study the relationship between genes and aging. Fast-track construction of the $20-million, two-story, 48,000-sf structure is scheduled to begin in July 2002, with December 2003 the targeted completion date. The architect for the project is Overland Partners of San Antonio.

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New Bioinformatics Incubator to House Medical Campus

Published 1/8/2002

A new Fairfax County bioinformatics incubator opening in January 2002 will house the Medical Campus of North Virgina Community College as well as offices for Inova Fairfax Hospital. Located near the Franconia-Springfield Metro station, the incubator is projected to eventually become a full-fledged medical research campus. Holding up to eight companies, the incubator includes 8,500-sf of office space and will cost $1.5 million over three years to operate.

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Santa Clara University Relocates Leavey School of Business

Published 1/8/2002

Santa Clara University is planning a three-story, 82,000-sf facility as the new home of the Leavey School of Business. Funded by a $15 million pledge, the new building will house the science, technology and society center, several conference rooms, and will consolidate all MBA and executive curriculum business classrooms.

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University of California Opens Washington, D.C Facilities

Published 1/8/2002

The University of Califonia's government studies externship program has now occupied its new 176,270-sf Washington facility. The 11-story, $30-million dollar building was designed by architect Einhorn Yaffee Prescott and houses dormitory space for 300 students, classrooms and office space. Managing the project was Mark G. Anderson Consultants with Tompkins as general contractor and Clark performing foundation work.

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Central Institute for the Deaf Expands St. Louis Campus

Published 1/8/2002

The Central Institute for the Deaf, an institution combining oral education for deaf children, scientific research, clinical services, and graduate education, has expanded their urban St. Louis campus. The new two-story, 42,000-sf classroom building resembles the original 1928 Mediterranean-style building. The school has a full-sized gym, family center, music, art and discovery rooms, and a library/computer lab suite. Each classroom meets rigid acoustical requirements for background noise.

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Florida State University Renovates Ringling Art Museum

Published 1/8/2002

Florida State University (FSU) has selected HOK Florida to design the expansion and renovation of the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida. The Ringling Museum is the largest university museum in the nation. The proposed $44 million project will expand the complex to include a new Visitor Center and Interactive Art Education Facility. An adjunct to the existing Museum will include new art exhibiition galleries as well as a new Art Collection, Library and Archives Facility.

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New Genomics Lab at UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine

Published 1/8/2002

Ground was recently broken on the Koret Comparative Genomics Laboratory at the UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. Made possible by a $1 million Koret Foundation grant, the lab is slated to open in 2002. Research subjects will inlcude genetically related pet disorders such as canine heart problems and feline cancers, eye disorders and head defects.

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