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![]() (Photo courtesy of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott.) Norris Cotton Cancer Center Research Laboratories
The three-story, vertical addition provides space for the Center's clinical, research, and administration functions to be housed in one building, facilitating strategies for the treatment and cure of cancer. The additional floors layer wet lab and dry lab research on top of the doctors' offices and clinical space. Patient care facilities are expanded as physician offices are moved from Level 3 to Level 4. Researchers now have easier access to the interdisciplinary clinics on Levels 2, 3, and 4, and to the laboratories and support services in the adjacent Borwell Research Building. In 1990, the Center, named for U.S. Senator Norris Cotton, R-N.H., achieved designation as Comprehensive Cancer Center by the National Cancer Institute. Just prior to the renovated Center's occupancy in 2003, the NCI announced the Center's earning another five-year designation as a Comprehensive Cancer Center, with a recommended doubling of its federal funding to $3.6 million per year. Office space for physicians and research scientists is on Level 5. Level 8 houses the Center's administration offices and expanded space for cancer prevention and epidemiology researchers. A continuous band of clerestory windows separates the interior walls from the ceilings and allows natural light to flood the workspaces. A mechanical penthouse is at the very top of the facility. Levels 6 and 7 house labs for researchers focusing on cancer immunology, molecular therapeutics, and cancer mechanisms. Given the 30' x 30' column grid in the original building, studies quickly showed that a 10' lab module worked cleanly with the existing grid. It has also proven to be a successful lab-planning module with positive implications for the effective use of lab space in future projects. The open labs with very few walls create neighborhoods and facilitate interaction among the researchers. However, within the open areas, careful attention was given to the users' sense of territory—the spatial dimensions with discernable physical definition that feel comfortable to occupants. Flexibility is enhanced by modular benches that are height-adjustable and moveable. Services requiring fixed locations (i.e. sinks) are located at the bench ends. Support alcoves house sensitive equipment and tissue culture rooms. Whiteboards, glass-walled break rooms, communal spaces, and conference rooms encourage interaction. A spiral staircase links the labs on Levels 6 and 7. The simple and effective use of color, form and light to engage, stimulate and orient the user within the laboratory environment. The lab floors and Level 8 (offices) overlook a three-story atrium that links the multi-disciplinary space to provide a unified identity for research and to enable the floors to function together as a single unit. Afternoon tea, natural lighting and comfortable seating, and conference rooms draw researchers from their labs to this space where the expansive, glazed curtain wall offers views of the Connecticut River Valley hills and the rest of the DHMC complex. "The new facility has had an immediate impact, providing a beautiful and energized environment for interaction and collaboration," says Cancer Center Director Dr. Mark Israel. "The expansion of our facilities has brought about a fundamental change in the way we operate. The building is a winner."
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[ ] [ ] [ ] Waterwall ![]() The glass "waterfall" in the atrium emphasizes the vertical connection between floors and symbolizes the interconnected nature of the entire research facility. (Photo courtesy of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott ©Richard Mandelkorn.) Lab Interior ![]() The laboratory is divided into three zones: write-up desk, bench and support alcove (Photo courtesy of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott ©Richard Mandelkorn.) Interaction Spaces ![]() Open space provides an "oasis" of calm in the dense lab environment and facilitates interaction. A spiral staircase leads down to Level 6. (Photo courtesy of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott ©Richard Mandelkorn.) Whiteboards Notes:![]() Whiteboards facilitate discussions in the labs. (Photo courtesy of Shepley Bulfinch Richardson and Abbott ©Flying Squirrel.) |
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