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UT
Research Park Project Hopes to Boost Houston as Biotech Leader
New Research Facility Receives Funding
Gov. Rick Perry recently announced a $25 million grant from
the Texas Enterprise Fund to attract a new Center for Advanced
Diagnostic Imaging at the University of
Texas Research Park in Houston. In addition to the $25 million
grant from the TEF, another $25 million was committed by M.D.
Anderson Cancer Center and the UT
Health Science Center at Houston. GE Healthcare is committing
$30 million in equipment and personnel to the project, which
will hasten the development of new commercially marketable
biomedical imaging technologies.
"This joint partnership between the private and public
sectors will put Texas at the forefront of medical innovations
that will help us fight cancer and cardiovascular disease
while creating more than 2,200 highly skilled jobs,"
Perry said.
In December 2001 Perry created the Council on Science and
Biotechnology
Development to look at ways to create partnerships between
institutions of higher learning, industry and government to
promote biotechnology as an economic development tool.
"We are taking biotechnology to the next level by anchoring
this effort at the Texas Medical Center," Perry said.
Curtains to Open
on PAC
Cadence McShane Corp., headquartered in Rosemont, Ill., is
in its final stages of construction on the 52,000 sq. ft.
Performing Arts Center for Texas A&M University's Corpus
Christi campus. Crews are working to complete the installation
of the roofing system while panel erection was recently completed.
The precast panels will accent the dramatic 50-ft. glass curtainwall
overlooking Corpus Christi Bay. The project is on schedule
for completion in the fall.
Dallas Medical
Center and UTSW Partner on $20 Million Cancer Center
Indiana-based TASUS Corp., the first Toyota parts supplier
to move into Central Texas, recently celebrated the groundbreaking
of its Georgetown manufacturing plant. Construction on the
plant is scheduled to begin this month, and the plant is expected
to be operational by January.
The plastic-injection molding facility will supply parts
to the new Toyota truck plant in San Antonio, which is set
to open in 2006. The new plant is expected to create more
than 200 jobs and bring more than $8 million to the local
economy during the next five years.
Beck Group Gets
Back to Nature
The Austin office of The Beck Group recently announced that
the Stark Foundation has awarded pre-construction and construction
services to Beck for the Shangri La Botanical Gardens and
Nature Center in Orange. The construction schedule, which
will begin in February, is approximately 18 months for the
$15 million project.
Shangri La is a unique ecosystem possessing not only wetlands,
but a mixed deciduous forest, cypress tupelo swamp and a large
lake that attracts ducks and migratory birds.
"We will have the opportunity to do many great things
on this project that will continue to boost our LEED experience,"
said Kathy Zarsky, Beck's project manager. "This is a
very site-sensitive project due to the wetland environments
and wildlife habitat it currently maintains. We will be using
'light' construction practices and will also get
to explore the use of photovoltaic systems and renewable energy
sources."
The gardens first opened to the public in 1946. After the
250-acre private reserve was heavily damaged by a hard freeze
in the mid-1950s, it was closed to the public and maintained
on a limited scale.
The project design team includes Mesa Design Group of Dallas,
Lake Flato Architects Inc. of San Antonio and Jeffrey Carbo
ASLA of Alexandria, La.
Hunt Awarded
Southwest Irving Municipal Center Project
Hunt Construction Group of Scottsdale, Ariz., has been awarded
the $16 million Southwest Irving Municipal Center project,
which consists of a seven-building complex with more than
100,000 sq. ft. Also included will be 30 acres of paving and
sitework.
Construction is underway and is scheduled for completion in
February.
Baylor Medical
Center Begins Construction on Office Building
Baylor Medical Center at Irving recently began construction
on a 127,000 sq. ft., five-story medical office building in
the heart of the hospital campus. Dallas-based MEDCO Construction
is the general contractor for the $13 million building designed
to meet the growing medical needs of the Irving community
while allowing Baylor Irving to expand its level of service.
Because the existing offices at Baylor Irving are fully leased,
the new office building will provide much needed on-campus
space for its medical staff. Construction will also include
an education center accommodating up to 300 people, and a
skybridge to the hospital.
Located on the northwest corner of the Baylor Irving campus,
the building will provide on-campus space for two of the hospital's
largest group practices, HealthTexas and the Medical and Surgical
Clinic of Irving. Other individual physicians offices and
group practices have also committed to space in the building,
with about 65 percent pre-leased. The building will be owned
and developed by Nashville, Tenn.-based Healthcare Realty
Trust and is scheduled to open in May 2005.
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