College builds toward future
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Jeff Benson
The California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology officially opened its new $44-million research facility
Friday with a ribbon-cutting ceremony in front of nearly 350
university faculty and industry leaders.
The ceremony was held a day after UC regents voted unanimously to
spend $371 million to replace the 30-year-old UCI Medical Center in
Orange by 2009.
Faculty, students and partners will use the 120,000-square-foot,
four-story California Institute for Telecommunications and
Information Technology building to conduct collaborative research in
information technologies, communications, digital arts and
economy-related applications. It will also house art and science
classes for the university’s students.
“It is a very unusual building, because people using the building
are coming from many different disciplines,” said the institute’s
director, Albert Yee. “It’s really a cross-section of the entire
campus. We’ve got many of the same interests under one roof so they
can interact. Some of our highly specialized laboratories don’t exist
anywhere else.”
The most unique portion of the building, Yee said, is the
biomedical engineering lab, where researchers will work on developing
microscopic devices for implantation.
“It allows us to make many small things in a very sterile
environment,” Yee said. “We are not aware of any facility that allows
that.”
A sister research facility is scheduled for completion at UC San
Diego in spring 2005. When the San Diego building opens in October,
faculty and students at the two campuses will be able combine their
research instantly from both locations. The researchers will use a
fiber-optic network that enables them to teleconference at 200
gigahertz per second at many places throughout the buildings, Yee
said.
Lisa Kalustian, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s chief deputy director
for Southern California, said the governor issued a statement because
he was unable to attend the ceremony.
“I commend the university on its efforts in learning and
information technology research,” Kalustian read on Schwarzenegger’s
behalf. “Its unwavering devotion to technological innovation improves
our lives and builds a pathway to the future.”
UCI Executive Vice Chancellor Ralph J. Cicerone called the
facility “a spectacular building.”
“It’s a facility designed around the idea of collaboration,”
Cicerone said. “Collaboration between UCI and its friends in the
private sector ... and collaboration between students and faculty at
UCI. It’s an institute without intellectual walls.”
A future UCI expenditure was approved Thursday, as UC regents
voted to spend $371 million to replace the 30-year-old UCI Medical
Center in Orange. A 191-bed, seven-story building will join the
center’s existing 105-bed main hospital tower and 84-bed psychiatric
center, spokeswoman Kim Pine said.
The old county building will be demolished in 2009 after
construction of the new building is completed, she said. Safety
officials said it would be unsafe in the event of a major earthquake.
“The new university hospital we’re building is going to be a
patient-care teaching and research hospital,” Pine said. “What we’re
hoping is that it’s going to be a landmark center for medicine
that’ll attract the best and brightest faculty physicians and give us
a facility to provide the latest specialized care for the Orange
County community.”
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