Life Sciences building | University of Hawaiʻi System News /news News from the University of Hawaii Thu, 18 Sep 2025 23:18:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 /news/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/cropped-UHNews512-1-32x32.jpg Life Sciences building | University of Hawaiʻi System News /news 32 32 28449828 鶹ýPresident’s Award honors Excellence in Building and Grounds Maintenance /news/2025/09/18/uh-presidents-award-honors-hartison/ Thu, 18 Sep 2025 23:18:33 +0000 /news/?p=222313 Ivan Hartison received the award for his dedicated service at the Isabell Aiona Abbott Life Sciences Building.

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Gabe Lee, Ivan Hartison and Wendy Hensel
Board of Regents Chair Gabe Lee, Ivan Hartison and UH President Wendy Hensel

The University of 鶹ý named Ivan Hartison as the 2025 recipient of the President’s Award for Excellence in Building and Grounds Maintenance.

Hartison was honored for his vital work at the Isabella Aiona Abbott Life Sciences Building at UH ԴDz. He plays an important role in high-level research spaces, including BSL-2 labs and endangered species insectaries, where he helps ensure safety, sanitation and the protection of 鶹ý’s natural resources.

Beyond his daily duties, Hartison is known for going above and beyond, whether helping students recover endangered Hawaiian flies, lending a hand with heavy lifting or stepping in to support colleagues.

Through his commitment to his job at UH ԴDz, Hartison earned the respect from both peers and students, embodying the spirit of teamwork and service at the University of 鶹ý.

Established in 1986, the President’s Award for Excellence in Building and Grounds Maintenance recognizes a UH system employee who exemplifies dedication and excellence in supporting campus facilities.

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$10.7M for human, environmental microbiome research /news/2023/07/23/cobre-human-environmental-microbiome/ Sun, 23 Jul 2023 18:00:28 +0000 /news/?p=180691 A second grant of more than $10 million from the National Institutes of Health furthers UH as a microbiome research center of excellence.

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Researcher looking at flies in a glass container
Andrea Jani, COBRE research project leader, in her lab

Researchers at have been awarded $10.7 million from the (NIH) to study how human health is impacted by exposure to microbes, how microbiomes are impacted by environmental and social-economic gradients in 鶹ý, and how an animal’s microbiome confers persistent health (using invertebrate hosts).

“We want to develop the best and the brightest of the next generation of researchers that are experts in studying environmental microbiomes and their interaction with humans,” said Principal Investigator Anthony Amend, a professor with the (PBRC).

Building on Phase 1

The latest grant from the NIH Centers of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) is considered a Phase 2 grant. Five years ago, a $10.4-million Phase 1 grant enabled the UH Mānoa (ICEMHH) to emerge as a recognized center of excellence in understanding the ways environmental microbiomes impact human health using approaches that range from the molecular and chemical to the ecological.

In addition to substantial scientific outputs, including 35 publications and more than $22 million in extramural investigator grants, Phase 1 investigators helped to establish world-class field sites on multiple islands that leverage 鶹ý’s uniquely steep environmental gradients, and to develop tractable, local, model host systems to understand microbiome impacts in host health and physiology.

COBRE Phase 2 builds upon Phase 1 and encompasses four research projects:

Two people looking at a fly trap in the field
Alex Samori and Kelli Konicek collect flies in ԴDz
  1. Mohammad Arif, an assistant researcher in , is studying sources of food-born pathogens and mechanisms of how they establish on crops.
  2. Ellinor Haglund, an assistant professor of , is researching microbiome interactions with the hormone leptin in Drosophila (fruit fly) obesity.
  3. Andrea Jani, an assistant researcher in PBRC is examining the interaction between microbiome and disease in Drosophila models.
  4. Corrie Miller, an assistant professor of , is researching factors influencing the vaginal microbiome and its role in preterm births.

Life sciences at the heart

The “heart” of ICEMHH is the (LSB), which houses teaching and research labs, as well as three core facilities for microscopy, genomic analysis and an insectary. The building also holds the labs of five graduated, current and proposed COBRE researchers, as well as the core facility directors. Approximately 65% of the total research space is occupied by ICEMHH personnel and facilities.

“What the COBRE does is allow us to combine the ecology and then environmental diversity of 鶹ý and these Hawaiian systems with human health concepts,” said Jani. “That’s something that’s big and complex and that takes a lot of collaborative effort to do.”

Applications for infectious diseases

close up of two flies
Drosophila crucigera, a species of Hawaiian picture wing flies

Jani’s lab is in the LSB. She is being mentored by Phase 1 researcher Joanne Yew, who also oversees the Microbial Genomics and Analytical Laboratory core facility.

“The COBRE energizes the state of microbiome research at the university,” Yew said. “So that means that it will attract people to come here and do microbiome research—attract and build the intellectual environment.”

Jani is researching how the fruit fly microbiome responds to infection.

“Fruit flies allow us to study this infection process of infectious disease, to understand conceptually what causes the microbiome to be stable or not stable in the face of infection,” Jani said. “And then we can take especially some of the ecological principles, the ecological factors that contribute to stability, and start to apply those to humans.”

Beyond direct advances to human and environmental health, the COBRE grant also benefits 鶹ý residents in other ways.

“Our Phase 1 investigators were awarded more than $22 million in external grants, mostly from federal agencies, and that all comes back to the state in terms of salaries and expertise,” said Amend. “It’s really a boon for—not just the university—but for the people of 鶹ý as well.”

by Kelli Abe Trifonovitch

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BOR approves naming Life Sciences Building after ‘First Lady of Limu’ /news/2023/01/19/isabella-aiona-abbott-life-sciences-building/ Thu, 19 Jan 2023 20:56:53 +0000 /news/?p=171645 The late UH ԴDz ethnobotany professor emerita and Kānaka Maoli made an indelible mark in the scientific community.

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Isabella Abbott and Life Sciences Building

The University of 鶹ý Board of Regents voted unanimously to approve the renaming of the UH ԴDz Life Sciences Building after the “First Lady of Limu,” Isabella Aiona Abbott, at its meeting on January 19, 2023, following a groundswell of support from the campus community.

The late UH ԴDz ethnobotany professor emerita and Kānaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) made an indelible mark in the scientific community, paving the way for success of integrating the excellence of 鶹ý’s traditional and customary practices and knowledge into western science. Abbott was also instrumental in establishing the UH ԴDz ethnobotany program, which is the study of the interaction between humans and plants.

Isabella Aiona Abbott
Isabella Aiona Abbott, 90, in her laboratory.

The state-of-the-art three-story, 70,000-square-foot facility building, which opened for instruction in fall 2020, will now be known as the Isabella Aiona Abbott Life Sciences Building.

Dr. Isabella Aiona Abbott truly exemplifies what it means to be a person of significance to the University of 鶹ý. And the new Life Sciences Building provides a highly befitting opportunity to honor her life, career and contributions,” wrote UH President David Lassner in his letter recommending the building’s renaming to the Board of Regents.

“It’s about the opportunity for us to use these kinds of recognitions to reflect not only on the legacy but who do we want to be as a community,” UH Board of Regents Vice Chair Alapaki Nahale-a said. “I was really moved not just by the words but the way and the beautiful spirit behind it. The beginning of the 2023, I just feel like this is the type of energy that our system can capitalize on and use to be the aspirational institution we need to be for 鶹ý.”

About six years ago, the renaming effort began as a grass-roots campaign. More than 3,000 people signed a petition, and more than 100 people submitted testimony in support. UH ԴDz Native Hawaiian Student Services assisted with publicizing the effort, and held a series of events that included student films, silk screening workshops, classroom visits and more. In addition, other campus groups including the UH ԴDz Faculty Senate, Associated Students of UH, Graduate Student Organization and Kualiʻi Council overwhelmingly supported the renaming.

“She faced numerous barriers to her career advancement but she not only smashed them, she also worked to open pathways for other Native Hawaiian scientists,” Department of Oceanography and 鶹ý Sea Grant Associate Professor Rosie Alegado told the Board of Regents. “Most importantly, Izzie’s unparalleled achievements were not made in spite of her upbringing and cultural heritage but because of them.”

Annie Abbott Foerster, Abbott’s daughter, wrote to the Board of Regents, “Our mom, Tūtū and dear friend is undoubtedly smiling her huge and warming smile at this tremendous honor. …May Dr. Abbott’s legacy of selfless service to one another, countless mentorships, and her tireless pursuits in marine botany (limu) combined with the intentional recognition of deeply rooted Hawaiian traditions remain an example and a covering for this building and all who pass through its doors.”

“This is a way that we can continue to increase Native Hawaiian student representation in the STEM fields…the opportunity for students to see someone who looks like them, talks like them and comes from a similar place that they do—somebody who has achieved academic success at the highest levels,” Native Hawaiian Student Services Director Willy Kauai said. “The Life Sciences Building being named after Dr. Isabella Abbott is a really good step that the university took to adddress issues of representation.”

Kauai added, “It reminds society that Hawaiian knowledge, ancestral knowledge is valuable to the university, the students that we serve and to the larger 鶹ý.”

First Lady of Limu

Abbott graduated from Kamehameha Schools and earned her undergraduate degree in botany from UH ԴDz. She earned her master’s degree in botany from the University of Michigan and her PhD in botany from the University of California, Berkeley, becoming the first Kānaka Maoli woman to earn a PhD in science.

Abbott then headed for Stanford University as a research associate and lecturer, studying marine algae on the California coast. Upon her promotion from lecturer to full professor, she became the first woman and the first person of color to become a full professor of biology at Stanford. Abbott became the leading marine botanist of the Pacific, discovering more than 200 algae, which earned her the nickname “First Lady of Limu.”

She and her husband Donald Putnam Abbott retired from Stanford and moved back to 鶹ý in 1992. She joined the faculty at UH ԴDz and served as the G.P. Wilder Professor of Botany, and helped establish the ethnobotany program—teaching thousands of students throughout the years. Abbott died in 2010 at the age of 91.

Championing Kānaka Maoli education

Abbott has made numerous contributions to the advancement of Kānaka Maoli across the UH System. In 1986, she was a co-author of the seminal ʻū Hawaiian Task Force Report, along with 18 other Kānaka Maoli faculty and staff. The task force was charged with reviewing the direction and commitment of the UH System to traditional Hawaiian culture and to Hawaiians; identifying programs or obstacles which deter the commitment to Hawaiian culture and to the education of Hawaiians; and to recommend solutions that the university can undertake to overcome these problems and obstacles.

Research excellence

Abbott published eight books and more than 150 research papers and technical reports. She earned the Darbaker Prize from the Botanical Society of America in 1969, the Charles Reed Bishop Medal in 1993 and the National Academy of Sciences Gilbert Morgan Smith Medal for excellence in published research on algae in 1997. Abbott was named a Living Treasure of 鶹ý and received a lifetime achievement award from the 鶹ý Department of Land and Natural Resources for her studies of coral reefs.

Community involvement

Abbott was also highly involved in the community, serving on the Bishop Museum Board of Directors, Kahoʻolawe Island Reserve Commission and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Advisory Committee for the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument.

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UH’s first major design-build project honored for excellence /news/2022/05/23/life-sciences-building-award/ Mon, 23 May 2022 22:56:01 +0000 /news/?p=159258 The $65 million, three-story facility is home to the College of Natural Sciences’ School of Life Sciences and the Pacific Biosciences Research Center.

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building with an award shaped like a large teardrop

The University of 鶹ý at ԴDz’s state-of-the-art Life Sciences Building, the university’s first major design-build project completed in 2020, was recently honored with a statewide commercial real estate award.

Project leaders accepted the nonprofit project award, which was presented at the on May 6 at The Royal Hawaiian. The awards are hosted annually by NAIOP 鶹ý, the local chapter of the nation’s leading organization for developers, owners and investors of office, industrial, retail and mixed-use real estate.

clear glass award

The $65 million, three-story facility is home to the College of Natural Sciences’ and the (PBRC), which operates one of two transmission electron microscopes in the state (the UH ԴDz operates the second). With 21 state-of-the-art teaching and research laboratories, it was built to serve more than 500 students daily and support world class research. The building also features a 600-square-foot student collaboration area, 52 graduate student workstations, five conference rooms and 28 faculty offices.

A design-build project means that a single contract was created for the design and construction with a fixed cost. Design-build projects are more likely to be completed on time and with fewer cost overruns, compared to the typical design-bid-build process.

Seth Siaki from the UH Office of Project Delivery was the project manager and accepted the award alongside the design firm G70 and general contractor Layton Construction Company.

“The Life Sciences Building is an awesome project that proves the university has amazing employees that makes it possible to execute complex projects,” Siaki said. “Our in-house experts in the department of COPF (Campus Operations and Facilities) supporting the Office of Project Delivery with this project was paramount. All the hard work by the university, the School of Life Sciences, PBRC, the contractor and the designers helped make the Life Sciences Building a success for the campus.”

The jurors’ statement read, “The design team clearly met the owner’s project goals by consolidating previously spread out life sciences departments into one location. The 76,000 SF (square foot) building is unique for a science building, as it provides gathering spaces and open plazas for students to gather.”

The UH Office of Project Delivery is responsible for just about every major capital improvement project for the 10-campus UH System, including the Life Sciences Building. The office was completely transformed after David Lassner became UH president adopting industry best practices, implementing a new project management system and centralized online system for issuing solicitations and receiving proposals or bids and assembling a team of experienced construction professionals to manage projects.

Related UH News stories:

This work is an example of UH ԴDz’s goal of (PDF), one of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.

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Demolition of Snyder Hall begins /news/2021/06/04/demolition-of-snyder-hall-begins/ Sat, 05 Jun 2021 00:20:38 +0000 /news/?p=143087 The demolition of the 59-year-old building on iconic McCarthy Mall is scheduled to be complete in mid-July.

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Snyder Hall demolition
Snyder Hall demolition progress as of June 10

An extended reach excavator began tearing into Snyder Hall on the campus on June 4, 2021, marking the start of demolition of the 59-year-old, 5-story building. The demolition of the building on iconic McCarthy Mall is scheduled to be complete in mid-July.

Snyder Hall being torn down
Beginning demolition on June 4

The former occupants of Snyder Hall were relocated to the $65-million Life Sciences Building located at the Diamond Head end of McCarthy Mall after it was opened in July 2020.

State lawmakers budgeted $70 million in the 2021 legislative session for a replacement building at the Snyder Hall location that will include flexible learning and office spaces that support modern methods of online delivery, collaboration and advising.

life sciences building
Life Sciences Building

Snyder Hall is the first of four buildings (including Holmes Hall, Keller Hall, Kuykendall Hall) identified in the 鶹ýԴDz Long Range Development Plan (LRDP) to be replaced or renovated because of age and condition. Another LRDP project, the $41-million renovation project to transform the Sinclair Library into a state-of-the-art student success center, is underway. LRDP completed projects include the demolition of Henke Hall in 2017 and construction of the Life Sciences Building at the Henke location.

The plan also calls for converting campus interior roads into pedestrian malls and permanently removing more than 50, one-story, wooden, portable buildings across the campus to create additional outdoor space.

Rendering of Snyder Hall
Rendering of concept for Snyder Hall replacement and adjacent open space

This commitment to facilities improvement is an example of UH ԴDz’s goals of (PDF), one of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.

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Eerie animal noises, world-class research part of Snyder Hall’s history /news/2021/05/25/eerie-animal-noises-part-of-snyder-halls-history/ Tue, 25 May 2021 22:22:51 +0000 /news/?p=142297 Snyder Hall was among 37 new buildings constructed during the biggest campus expansion ever during the mid 1950s to mid 1960s.

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Snyder Hall
Snyder Hall

University of 鶹ý at ԴDz’s Snyder Hall, scheduled for demolition in June, will be remembered for its world-class research, and for many, being part of bygone era when laboratory animal science was a common practice at universities around the country. As researchers made groundbreaking discoveries, former students and employees from the 1970s and 1980s recall the eerie animal noises echoing through McCarthy Mall, where Snyder Hall is located.

The five-story concrete building was built in 1962 for $1.5 million. Snyder Hall was replaced in 2020 with the $65-million state-of-the-art Life Sciences Building located on the East-West Road end of McCarthy Mall.

Snyder Hall part of largest campus expansion

Black and white photo of Snyder Hall
Snyder Hall in 1962 (Photo by M. Miyamoto) Click/tap for larger image

Snyder Hall was among 37 new buildings constructed during the biggest campus expansion ever at UH ԴDz during the mid 1950s to mid 1960s. Initially spearheaded by then UH President Paul Bachman, the buildup was supported by a new generation of Democratic lawmakers, who had just ended a half century of Republican legislative control. Many of the lawmakers who overrode a governor’s veto to fund the expansion with tax increases were UH graduates and World War II veterans.

Bachman died unexpectedly in 1957, and was replaced by Laurence H. Snyder, an internationally known geneticist. During Snyder’s tenure as president from 1958 to 1963, UH doubled the number of students, academic courses, and degree programs offered. He also oversaw the construction of the new buildings and the installation of the iconic pedestrian thoroughfare, McCarthy Mall, one of Snyder’s proudest accomplishments.

One of the new buildings, the Health Research Institute Building, was renamed Snyder Hall in 1967 in his honor.

World-class research People in a lab

Snyder Hall was home to a number of internationally recognized academics performing cutting-edge research in biology and microbiology.

Here are just a few examples of the world-class research performed there over nearly six decades.

  • Microbiology Professor Maqsudul Alam led a group that sequenced the genome of SunUp papaya, the first published tropical fruit genome sequenced. Alam also discovered in the Archaea and Bacteria, proteins which trigger responses to oxygen, for which he was awarded a UH Excellence in Research Award (2001). He also established the Advanced Studies in Genomics, Proteomics and Bioinformatics facility, now based in the new Life Sciences Building.
  • Microbiology Professor Phil Loh is credited with the invention of the field of shrimp tissue cell culture, which has allowed the study of viruses that infect shrimps. Loh also founded the virology program in 1961 and was the first person at UH to receive the Regents’ Medal for Excellence in Research in 1965.
  • Microbiology Professor Clair Edwin Folsome was world renowned for his studies on the origins of life, astrobiology and closed biosystems.
  • Microbiology Professor Stuart Donachie’s lab discovered still the second only known species in a unique cyanobacteria order with the first having been discovered in 1974. The sample came from a cave in the Kīlauea Caldera, and provides an “edit” to the history of the evolution of photosynthesis. Donachie’s lab has cultivated and named many other new microbes from 鶹ý.
  • Microbiology Professor Tung Hoang‘s lab studies bacterial infectious diseases and developed a pioneering method for studying functional genomics of single bacterial cells based around a system called “laser micro-dissection,” funded by the National Science Foundation in 2008 and grants from the National Institute of Health. The laser system is housed in the Biological Electron Microscope Facility, which has its own impressive history.

Thousands of researchers supported by Biological Electron Microscope Facility

The Biological Electron Microscope Facility (BEMF) was established at Snyder Hall in 1984 by Emeritus Professor Richard D. Allen. Allen was world renowned for his work on the model organism Paramecium. Over the years, BEMF has been utilized by more than a thousand researchers from UH, local technology companies, state and federal agencies and other academic institutions. BEMF’s state-of-the-art equipment is used to examine biological samples from viruses, bacteria and other microbes, invertebrates, vertebrates, plants and materials science samples such as photovoltaic thin films and fuel cell membranes.

The facility’s mission to provide instrumentation, training and services to the broader scientific community continues today in its new home in the Life Sciences Building.

Frogs and monkeys and sea lions, oh my!

The Laboratory Animal Service (LAS) was located on the 5th floor of Snyder Hall, which included an outdoor patio area. The early 2000s witnessed a major reduction in live-animal research due to increasing activism and rising costs, with the last animals leaving the building in 2007.

A wide array of animals were housed there, including mice, rats, rabbits, guinea pigs, chickens, cats, Xenopus frogs, owls and Rhesus monkeys. The Rhesus monkeys are apparently what made the most and loudest noises, which echoed through McCarthy Mall.

“The old-timers told me of some brazen escapes in the 1980’s,” said retired UH ԴDz LAS employee Norman Magno. “Individual Rhesus escaped the pens and climbed down the adjoining coconut trees, entered Webster Hall quietly, and attended psychology and nursing classes with students without them knowing that a monkey was in attendance. I have been told stories like this on several occasions.”

Magno also said the “old-timers claim that sometime in the 1970’s and before the establishment of the animal advisory committee (now referred to as the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee), sea lions were housed in inflatable swimming pools on the 5th floor Snyder Hall Patio. Passersby often reported hearing dogs barking in the morning hours, that were actually the sea lions.”

Snyder demolition part of larger campus plan

Snyder Hall exterior

The demolition of Snyder Hall will be the latest completed project in the UH ԴDz’s Long Range Development Plan, following the demolition of Henke Hall in 2017, and construction of the now open Life Sciences Buildings in its place. The 2021 state Legislature approved funding for a new building on the Snyder Hall site that will have flexible learning and office spaces to support modern methods of online course delivery, collaboration and advising.

The plan identified Snyder Hall as the first of four buildings to be renovated, replaced or removed because of age and condition, and to reduce energy and maintenance costs. The other buildings are Holmes Hall, Keller Hall, and Kuykendall Hall.

Another project, the $41-million renovation of the Sinclair Library into a Student Success Center, is currently underway. The plan also calls for replacing campus interior roads with pedestrian malls, and removing more than 50 portable buildings on campus to create more open space.

This capital improvement effort is an example of UH āԴDz’s goal of (PDF), one of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.

Rendering of Snyder Hall
Rendering of concept for Snyder Hall replacement and adjacent open space
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Snyder Hall to be razed, 鶹ýԴDz improvement plans proceed /news/2021/03/25/snyder-to-be-razed-improvement-plans-proceed/ Thu, 25 Mar 2021 20:42:21 +0000 /news/?p=137843 The demolition in May marks the start of Phase 2 of the UH ԴDz Mini Master Plan.

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Snyder Hall exterior

Snyder Hall on the University of 鶹ý at ԴDz campus is scheduled to be demolished in May marking the start of Phase 2 of the UH ԴDz Mini Master Plan. The opening of the $65-million Life Sciences Building in July 2020 signaled the completion of Phase 1 of the plan, which also included the removal of Henke Hall in 2017, where the new state-of-the-art Life Sciences Building stands on the Diamond Head end of McCarthy Mall.

The former occupants of Snyder Hall have relocated to the Life Sciences Building, clearing the way for its removal. Construction barriers went up around Snyder in March, as crews prepare to raze and replace it with temporary landscaping. UH is currently requesting state funding for a new building on the site for flexible learning and office spaces that support modern methods of online delivery, collaboration and advising.

The ԴDz Mini Master Plan, approved by the UH Board of Regents in 2015, is part of the campusʻs Long Range Development Plan. The completion of the Life Sciences Building along with the start of both Phase 2 of the mini master plan and the $41-million renovation of the Sinclair Library into a student success center are significant milestones of the Long Range Development Plan.

Campus vision for the next decade

render of Sinclair library exterior
Render of pedestrian walkway

One of the goals of the Long Range Development Plan is to reduce energy and maintenance costs. Snyder Hall, built in 1962, was identified as the first of four buildings to be renovated, replaced or removed because of age and condition. The other buildings identified are Holmes Hall, Keller Hall and Kuykendall Hall.

The plan also calls for the removal of more than 50, one-story, wooden, portable buildings around campus to create additional outdoor space and make the campus more pedestrian friendly by converting interior roads—Campus Road, Varney Circle and Correa Road—into pedestrian malls.

Sinclair Student Success Center and Life Sciences Building

render of Sinclair library exterior
Render of Sinclair Student Success Center

The new Life Sciences Building and a student success center are also key parts of the long range plan. The $41-million renovation of the Sinclair Library will create the Sinclair Student Success Center next to the Campus Center and the Warrior Recreation Center. Sinclair is intended to be a hub of student interaction with modern, comfortable spaces that encourages students to remain on campus in between classes and after hours for individual study, group study, academic advising and tutoring.

The Sinclair Student Success Center follows the completion of the Life Sciences Building, The three-story, 70,000-square-foot facility with 21 state-of-the-art teaching and research laboratories, that will serve more than 500 students daily and support world-class research. The building is the new home to the College of Natural Sciences’ along with the .

The Life Sciences Building was the universityʻs first major design-build project, which is now standard practice at the university.

This capital improvement effort is an example of UH āԴDz’s goal of (PDF), one of four goals identified in the (PDF), updated in December 2020.

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Human, environmental health research develops via Hawaiʻi landscape /news/2020/12/11/human-environmental-health/ Fri, 11 Dec 2020 18:15:33 +0000 /news/?p=132321 UH āԴDz’s COBRE research projects aim to develop the tools to understand the interface between human and environmental health.

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The natural and human “landscape” of 鶹ý offers opportunities for the development of Earth’s microbiome research that exists nowhere else on the planet. As such, the University of 鶹ý is well positioned to make transformative contributions to this field of microbial research through a collaboration with the National Institutes of Health Center of Biomedical Research Excellence (COBRE) grants.

The COBRE technical are housed in UH āԴDz’s Life Sciences Building (LSB), with project leaders in LSB as well as spread across the campus. The aim is to develop the tools to understand the interface between human and environmental health, with a focus on the microbial forces shaping these dimensions of the biosphere.

vials in a lab
life sciences building

A video highlighting UH āԴDz’s COBRE research projects is .

Each COBRE grant develops a series of cores that are expected to establish and become sustainable for the university where they are created. Within the last 10 years, UH has hired more than 20 academics into the junior tenure-track ranks whose research concentration is on environmental microbiomes, wherever they may occur (human body, plant roots, water, soil, insects, other animals, etc).

“We have three cores—a microscopy core, an insectary and a molecular biology/biochemistry core that function in parallel to provide the platform for the building of competitive research programs, not only for the above-mentioned junior faculty, but for all UH researchers who might want to become involved with this arena,” said Margaret McFall-Ngai, professor at UH āԴDz’s (PRBC). She and Ned Ruby, also in PRBC, are the COBRE principal investigators.

“The center has every opportunity for being a mecca for researchers from across the nation and around the world.”

The approaches are highly diverse—from engineering and chemistry to the study of model systems. With the construction of LSB, these cores have found a new and permanent home. This has given the center the “wings” needed to perform at the highest possible levels of science.

“The COBRE is a gift to UH. It is the opportunity to create an active center for the study of the dynamic relationship between Earth’s microbiomes and human health,” said McFall-Ngai. “This gift will not only benefit researchers at UH, but the center has every opportunity for being a mecca for researchers from across the nation and around the world.”

woman on computer

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President’s August 2020 highlights and updates /news/2020/08/20/president-august-2020-report/ Thu, 20 Aug 2020 22:44:45 +0000 /news/?p=125507 Highlights include LumiSight UH health check-in app and COVID-19 safety training, fall sports postponed and the Next Steps program.

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University of 鶹ý President David Lassner made his report to the at their meeting on August 20, 2020.

Highlights include:

View previous reports to the board.

life sciences building

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Life Sciences Building ushers in new era at 鶹ýԴDz /news/2020/06/22/life-sciences-building-new-era/ Tue, 23 Jun 2020 02:11:41 +0000 /news/?p=120624 The Life Sciences Building will be home to the College of Natural Sciences biology, microbiology and botany departments along with the Pacific Biosciences Research Center.

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A new beginning for the with the completion of the Life Sciences building that will open for instruction in the fall 2020 semester. Located on the Diamond Head end of McCarthy Mall, the three-story, 70,000-square-foot facility with 21 state-of-the-art teaching and research laboratories, was built to serve more than 500 students daily and support world class research.

“This building was designed and constructed purposely to bring together many of our most-accomplished researchers with undergraduate and graduate students,” said UH ԴDz Provost Michael Bruno. “The interdisciplinary collaboration that will happen in the new facility offers an exciting opportunity for our students, our future researchers and leaders.”

life sciences building

The $65 million facility will be home to the College of Natural Sciences’ along with the (PBRC), which operates one of two transmission electron microscopes in the state (the UH ԴDz operates the second). Along with the 21 modern laboratories (six teaching, 15 research labs), the building also features a 600 square foot student collaboration area, 52 graduate student workstations, five conference rooms and 28 faculty offices.

“We are extremely excited that the Life Sciences building is ready,” said UH ԴDz College of Natural Sciences Dean Aloysius Helminck. “It’s a fantastic opportunity, a collaboration between several different units on campus to provide absolutely top-notch, world-class facilities for both research and instruction.”

“We cannot thank state lawmakers and the governor enough for supporting this project,” said UH President David Lassner. “Beyond the amazing educational and research opportunities that the facility offers our students and scientists, it also provided the university an opportunity to prove that it could efficiently build a facility that will advance 21st century teaching, learning and research.”

Vision turns to fruition

In 2016, university leadership committed to a new campus modernizing strategy–designing university space to foster interdisciplinary collaboration and communication that will also support modern teaching, learning, innovation and scholarship. Maximizing the efficiency of both capital and operational dollars was a critical component of the strategy.

lab room in life sciences building
Research laboratory in the Life Sciences Building
new hallway in life sciences building

The Life Sciences Building is the university’s first major design-build project, a single contract for the design and construction with a fixed cost. Design-build projects are more likely to be completed on time and with fewer cost overruns, compared to the typical design-bid-build process. The university partnered with Layton Construction Company, LLC, and its design consultant G70 for the Life Sciences project.

“The working relationship with Layton and G70 and the university was a true partnership,” said UH Vice President for Administration Jan Gouveia. “Everyone involved was committed to delivering a quality project.”

Gouveia added that for a project of this magnitude to go from concept to completion in just four years is a testament to the perseverance and commitment to the highest standards of everyone involved.

“Contributions from our design-build, construction management, campus operations, environmental health and safety, procurement, and fiscal offices, along with our dedicated faculty, made this modern instructional and research facility a reality,” said Gouveia. “Leadership from the College of Natural Sciences, PBRC and the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, was instrumental in programming the synergistic activities within the LSB to advance cutting edge collaboration amongst multiple disciplines.”

The UH Office of Project Delivery is responsible for just about every major capital improvement project for the 10 campus UH System, including Life Sciences. The office has been completely transformed over the last five years–adopting industry best practices, implementing a new project management system and centralized online system for issuing solicitations and receiving proposals or bids and assembling a team of experienced construction professionals to manage the project.

The next major project on the UH ԴDz campus is a $41 million, design-build to renovate the Sinclair Library into a student success center, which state lawmakers funded in 2019.

Iconic McCarthy Mall upgrade

The Life Sciences Building is an upgrade for McCarthy Mall, one of the iconic locations on campus. The new building is located on East-West Road between Kennedy Theatre and Moore Hall and across the street from Lincoln Hall and the Center for Korean Studies Building.

life sciences building exterior

“This building is now the anchor on the Diamond Head side of McCarthy Mall along with Kennedy Theatre, one of the primary entrance points and certainly one of the most loved areas of our campus,” said Bruno.

The buildingʻs open courtyard overlooks the mall and is conveniently located next to Hamilton Library and Paradise Palms Café. The Life Sciences houses six teaching laboratories, 15 research laboratories, 52 graduate student workstations, five conference rooms, twenty-eight faculty offices, a 600 square foot student collaboration area and an approximately 3,000 square foot shell space to allow for future office expansion.

The final phase of the project is the demolition of Snyder Hall, which is also along McCarthy Mall. That phase is expected to be completed in the summer of 2021.

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The post Life Sciences Building ushers in new era at UH ԴDz first appeared on University of Hawaiʻi System News.]]>
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