he Biology Division looks
forward to moving into a 250,000-square-foot building that will have modern
laboratories specifically designed for biological research. It will accommodate
working arrangements for the single researcher or for large groups. The
center will house the very extensive mouse colony, and, in separate, isolated
quarters, a facility for sensitive transgenic or immune-deficient mice.
X-ray crystallography, flow cytometry, electron microscopy, computer workstations,
and other facilities will be accommodated with easy access to the laboratories.
The biology library and conference rooms will be in the same building,
as will the offices and classrooms of the ORNL-University of Tennessee
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences.
In the immediate neighborhood of the building will be the current Environmental
Sciences Division buildings, and, not far away, the anticipated Advanced
Neutron Source, with facilities specifically dedicated to analyzing biological
materials. Within easy walking distance will be other basic science divisions
like Health Sciences Research (including Nuclear Medicine), Chemical and
Analytical Sciences, Physics, Solid State Physics, Engineering Physics
and Mathematics, Instrumentation and Controls, and the new Center for
Computational Sciences.
The Center for Biological Sciences will be readily accessible to visitors
and guest users--and ready to move into the 21st century.
Where to?
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