Tulane University Receives $13.5 Million in Stimulus Funding for Lab Space
The grant will fund the Tulane University Interdisciplinary Bioscience Initiative which seeks to construct labs in which scientists from different fields can conduct research together.
“Traditionally, science has been conducted in silos. Individual laboratories work on projects that are of interest to the investigators in those laboratories. But future advances are going to be made at the interfaces of those traditional disciplines where we bring together investigators from different areas working on a common problem,” says John Clements, professor and chair of the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at Tulane and principal investigator of the grant.
The revamped J. Bennett Johnston Building will feature open, flexible, laboratory spaces capable of being immediately reconfigured. Meeting spaces and conference areas for the cross-fertilization of ideas will be key elements in the new layout.
This project complements a Tulane-funded $46 million research and development revitalization initiative that includes “green” infrastructure upgrades and an investment in new faculty at the university"s downtown health sciences campus.
The project described in this release was supported by Award Number C06RR029949 from the National Center for Research Resources. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Center for Research Resources or the National Institutes of Health.