August 2014 NEWS The Southwest Portland Post • 7 OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building opens in South Waterfront By Erik Vidstrand The Southwest Portland Post The South Waterfront has another new building: the Collaborative Life Sciences Building and Skourtes Tower. It uniquely combines the resources and brainpower of three nationally respected universities under one roof: Oregon Health & Science University, Oregon State University, and Portland State University. The structure launches a new era in health and science research and edu- cation. Construction was completed a little over a month ago. This combination expands class size, teaching facilities, and research activi- ties which will benefit all Oregonians. By sharing the $295 million state-of- the art building, OHSU, OSU, and PSU will effectively grow their health and science programs without duplicating education and research space. With limited state resources, this ‘co- op’ approach takes collaboration to the next level. “At OHSU we’ve found that when we are open to the power of partnership, and willing to work with others to solve problems in the name of the public good, the opportunities are endless,” said President Joe Robertson, M.D. Rather than segregate the approxi- mately 650,000-square-foot building among the universities by floor, the design and construction team built integrated labs and shared classrooms. Every feature of the new building is designed to encourage interaction among university faculty, graduates, and undergraduates. From shared labs with electron mi- croscopy to other highly specialized instrumentation, OHSU, OSU, and PSU faculty will promote frequent idea sharing to state-of-the-art simulation centers. Health care providers, students, and staff across all health care professions will train side-by-side. “For PSU, this building offers des- perately needed lab, research and classroom space for our health and science majors,” said President Wim Wiewel, Ph.D. According to Wiewel, health and science are among the fastest growing fields of study at PSU. The Collaborative Life Sciences Build- ing will also provide capacity to add to the class sizes for OHSU’s medical and physician assistant students including the OSU/OHSU pharmacy program. “The Collaborative Life Sciences Building is a wonderful example of how well [all three institutions can] collaborate on behalf of Oregonians,” said OSU President Ed Ray, Ph.D. “This new facility will have a major impact on the OSU College of Phar- macy’s program. It provides dedicated and expanded instructional space and room for additional faculty aimed at providing the best clinical training pos- sible for future pharmacists.” Skourtes Tower will include a state- of-the-art school of dentistry and den- tal clinics that serve the public. It will bring dental students under the same roof with their nursing, allied health, pharma- cy, and medicine colleagues. L o c a t e d within OHSU’s new Schnitzer Campus at Port- land’s South Wa t e r f r o n t , the building is accessible by streetcar, aerial tram, and even- tually the new Orange MAX light rail line, slated to open The OHSU Collaborative Life Sciences Building recently opened in in September South Waterfront. (Post photo by Erik Vidstrand) 2015. sity is the state’s only public academic The building’s sustainable features health and research university. As one include green roofs, storm water col- of Oregon’s largest employers with lection for non-potable water uses more than 14,000 employees, OHSU’s throughout the building, energy- size contributes to its ability to provide efficient lighting, and climate control. many services not found anywhere else The building’s design and construc- in the state. tion team anticipate a LEED Platinum Oregon State University is also Or- certification. egon’s only university to hold both the Funded by a unique public-private Carnegie Foundation’s top designa- partnership model, the buildings in- tion for research institutions and its clude $110 million in state bonds, $92 prestigious Community Engagement million in OHSU institutional funding, classification. and $83 million in OHSU philanthropy Portland State University has about including a $40 million anonymous gift 30,000 undergraduate and graduate to OHSU, and $10 million from Bonnie students. PSU will provide every stu- and Gene Skourtes, D.M.D. dent with opportunities to work with TriMet contributed $10 million to the businesses, schools and organizations project. on real-world projects. Oregon Health & Science Univer-