  
Rendering courtesy of Robert A. M. Stern Architecture | 
  
  
    | Artist's rendering of the Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building. | 
  
Work has officially begun on a new state-of-the-art  research and teaching facility that will greatly enhance science and  engineering education and discovery at the University of Colorado.
The Wednesday, Sept. 9, groundbreaking of the  Jennie Smoly Caruthers Biotechnology Building also signaled a boost of the  state's position in the U.S. biotechnology economy. The first phase of the 257,000-square-foot  building is slated for completion in fall 2011, with plans for a  54,000-square-foot addition at a later date.
  The building will house 60 senior faculty  researchers and 500-plus research and support staff. Their combined work will  develop more effective medical diagnoses and therapies for cardiovascular  disease, cancer and infectious diseases, and create new opportunities in  regenerative medicine.
  The facility also will be home to CU's  Initiative in Molecular Biotechnology, the department of chemical and  biological engineering, and the biochemistry division faculty of the department  of chemistry and biochemistry.
University of Colorado President  Bruce D. Benson, CU-Boulder Chancellor Philip DiStefano, Nobel Laureate and CU Distinguished Professor Tom Cech and other members of the CU-Boulder community  gathered for the ceremony on the CU-Boulder east campus.
Benson said the building "will  draw on the talents of scientists and engineers from several disciplines and  create an incubator where innovation and discovery thrive."
  Also attending was Gov. Bill Ritter, who said  research at the facility "will have a profound impact on Colorado's biotech  economy. This facility will continue to strengthen Colorado's business  environment and elevate our bioscience ecosystem nationally and globally as we  lead Colorado forward."
Over half of the building's phase  I cost already has been committed, including more than $60 million from the  university, $20 million in gifts from an anonymous faculty member, $2 million  from Jack and Jeannie Thompson, chair of the University of Colorado Foundation  board of directors, and other private gifts.
Additional public and private  support is being sought for building construction, which will cost between $120  million and $145 million for the first phase.
"The foundation's  role is to raise private support for the building," said Jeremy  Simon, CU Foundation spokesman. "Now that construction has begun and we're accelerating our outreach about its  likely impact on CU and the region, we hope donors will be increasingly  inspired to support this building, and help CU solve science and  engineering quandaries, pursue advances in health, and save lives."
More information on the Caruthers  Biotechnology Building and the Colorado Initiative in Molecular Biotechnology  is available at http://cimb.colorado.edu/.