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![]() Photo courtesy of the University of Chicago. Photo by Peter Kiar. Ellen and Melvin Gordon Center for Integrative Science
The $135-million building provides space where research in physics, biology, and chemistry all merge. The CIS is home to the Biological Sciences Division, the Physical Sciences Division, the Institute for Biophysical Dynamics, the Ben May Institute for Cancer Research, the James Franck Institute, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. The 427,000-sf, seven-story structure is filled with special features and equipment. A three-story atrium serves as the interactive center with nearby conference rooms and dining facilities. Long suites of open lab space encourage interaction among the researchers. The labs contain very few walls and doors. Common areas include open corridors where researchers and staff can see and talk to one another on different levels of the building. Labs are designed for research in the areas of medicine, biochemistry and molecular biology, synthetic chemistry, and chemical biology. Physical science labs provide space for cryogenics, optics, and laser-based research. The facility also includes a 24,500-sf vivarium with isolation suite, X-ray processing room, molecular modeling center, fluorescence microscopy suite, labs for flow cytometry and radioisotopes, a crystallography suite, and an electronics shop. Lab support space includes cleanrooms, computer rooms, imaging facilities and an NMR equipment lab. Core facilities house X-ray, diffraction microscopy, proteomics, gene sequencing, and microarray. A custom-built elevator at 14-feet long and 9-feet wide, with a capacity load of 17,000 pounds, can transport large laser tables and other heavy laboratory equipment. Additionally CIS has five passenger elevators and one more passenger/freight elevator. A 4,000-pound chiller system should be more than adequate to service the building’s needs, even on a hot day. Nonetheless, plans exist to expand that capacity to 8,000 pounds.
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[ ] [ ] [ ] Exterior ![]() View of the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Center for Integrative Science at the University of Chicago. (Photo courtesy of the University of Chicago. Photo by Peter Kiar.) Atrium ![]() “Continuity,” a bronze sculpture created by Virginio Ferrari in 1992, adorns the Kersten Family Atrium on the third floor of the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Center for Integrative Science at the University of Chicago. The sculpture was donated by RR Donnelley. (Photo courtesy of the University of Chicago. Photo by Jason Smith.) Lab Interior ![]() A senior research associate in the Ben May Cancer Research Institute moves into the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Center for Integrative Science at the University of Chicago. (Photo courtesy of the University of Chicago. Photo by John Easton.) Lab Interior Notes:![]() Moving the laboratory of a professor of pediatrics into the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Center for Integrative Science at the University of Chicago. (Photo courtesy of the University of Chicago. Photo by John Easton.) |
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