|
Research center celebrates nature and collaboration
by Otesa
Middleton Miles
for Virginia Business
October 2006
In some ways,
the sprawling research center built by one of the world’s
largest philanthropies — the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute – is as reclusive
as the organization’s famous namesake. The
$500 million Janelia Farm Research Center is tucked
away
from the busy world amid 689 acres of woods and pastoral
land
in Loudoun County. Even the main building is hard
to spot from Route 7.
The Ashburn research facility, which opened in September,
was designed to create a collaborative, creative
environment for the world’s top scientists. But architect Rafael
Vinoly didn’t want an obtrusive, sterile building.
Instead he designed the curving, glass-walled, 317,000-square-foot
main structure into a rolling hillside. When visitors
approach the complex, all that’s visible is its
green roof, landscaped with plants that meld into the
farm’s setting along the southern banks of
the Potomac River.
Dirt removed from the hill was recycled back into
the site, sparing the dumping of thousands of
truckloads of dirt elsewhere. “It was a balance between excavation
and fill,” says HHMI architect Robert McGhee.
When contractors ran into a big rock in the hill,
it was crushed
and used for the roadbed.
While environmental-sustaining techniques
have characterized construction, the project itself
is the stuff of
scientists’ dreams.
Inside the main building are offices, laboratories and
a conference center, all connected by plenty of gathering
spaces to allow for collaboration. With free, hotel-like
lodging for conferences, on-site apartments for visiting
fellows, plus dining and fitness facilities, the center
promises to serve as a self-contained scientific utopia
for the study of broad biomedical questions. “We’re
trying to solve long-range, blue sky problems that no
one really knows how to solve,” says Gerald M.
Rubin, the center’s director and an internationally
recognized geneticist.
First researchers will explore how the brain’s
neuronal circuits process information, starting with
worms, flies and mice — an effort that could take
years. As investigators delve into new areas, they will
need new tools, says Rubin. Therefore, researchers will
simultaneously work on developing new imaging tools because,
he says, “Some of the technical tools we need don’t
exist. We’re trying to build those.”
By the summer of 2007, some 200 researchers
are expected to work at Janelia Farm. The
number is expected to grow to 400 in the
next three
or four
years.
The campus’ 96-room hotel has rooms on only one side of a curved, glass
corridor — designed so that all rooms face the site’s natural setting.
There’s even a bit of history. The Georgian-style manor house of the
previous owners, Vinton and Robert Pickens, is listed on the National Register
of Historic
Places, and still sits on the property.
HHMI purchased the farm in 2000, and construction began
in 2003. The farm got its name from the names of
the Pickens’ daughters, Jane and Cornelia. Rubin
says the name’s a keeper because it doesn’t limit the research or
pigeonhole the scientists. “If we call it The Brain Scientists Institute,
after 30 years we might work on something else.” Keeping the farm’s
moniker leaves the door open to study the next big question, whatever that
might be.
Project: Janelia Farm Research Center
Owner/Developer: Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Cost: $500 million
Architect: Rafael Viñoly Architects PC
General contractor: Turner Construction Co.
|