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QB3 Buildings
The research buildings constructed for QB3 at UC Berkeley, UC San Francisco, and UC Santa Cruz provide the physical environment for harnessing the synergies and interactions between QB3 investigators. The buildings house multidepartment and multidisciplinary laboratories, lecture halls, and shared scientific resources.
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UC Berkeley
Stanley Hall, completed in 2007, serves as a hub for multidisciplinary research and teaching involving the biological sciences, physical sciences, and engineering. The 285,000 gsf building houses QB3-Berkeley administrative staff, roughly 40 QB3-Berkeley faculty affiliate research labs, shared research facilities, and the Department of Bioengineering. The building also features classrooms and auditoriua, and conference rooms. To learn more, view the Stanley Hall fact sheet. For information on reserving Stanley Hall for meetings, please click here. Stanley occupants can review the Stanley Hall Safety and Facilities Information, including Building Emergency Plan and QB3-UCB Injury and Illness Prevention Program documents, by clicking here.
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UC San Francisco
Located at UCSF Mission Bay, Byers Hall was opened in February 2005. It has approximately 96,000 sq. ft. of space on five floors. Most of that space is used for computational biology, but the facility also includes MRI, combinatorial chemistry, and EM microscopy labs. Read about the November 28, 2005 inaugural event.
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UC Santa Cruz
Physical Sciences Building, completed in Spring 2006, is designed to foster interaction among researchers exploring human and environmental health. Completed in part with support from the Center for Biomolecular Science & Engineering (CBSE) and QB3, this five-story building has 132,000 assignable square feet of space for laboratories and classrooms in chemistry, environmental toxicology, and biomolecular engineering. It features state-of-the-art lab, classroom, and support facilities to serve a diverse group of scientists.
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Also
at UC Santa Cruz
QB3 occupies 6000 sq. ft. of space in the Engineering 2 Building (E2), which has 96,000 sq.ft. of teaching, research, and office space along with an interactive learning center.
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