CONTACT
Phone: (850) 645-1255
Feb. 4, 2003
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE BREAKS GROUND ON NEW BUILDING COMPLEX
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.-The Florida State University College of Medicine
broke ground today on a 270,000-square-foot complex of buildings
that will be the school's new home starting next year.
The $60 million complex on the northwest corner of the FSU campus
will consist of an education and administration building, which
includes facilities for first- and second-year medical education, a
research building and an auditorium.
"This new facility represents the first opportunity in more than 20
years to build an entirely new medical school from the ground up,"
said College of Medicine Dean J. Ocie Harris, M.D.
"It will offer the latest in medical information technology and
wireless communications to keep our students on the cutting edge."
The three new medical school buildings will surround a cloister
garden and will follow the Jacobean architecture of the historic
core of the FSU campus. They will be built in phases over the next
two years, with the education and administration building expected
to be complete by next summer.
The medical school then will begin moving out of its current
facilities in the renovated buildings previously occupied by FSU's
Developmental Research School. Gradually, all of the buildings that
once housed the school known as "Florida High" will be torn down to
make way for the phased construction of the research building and
the auditorium.
The technologically rich interior space of the new buildings will
feature wireless Internet capabilities throughout and classrooms
outfitted with state-of-the-art electronics for classroom
presentations, videoconferencing and distance learning. Eight
student communities, each accommodating 30 students, will provide a
learning environment that promotes teamwork and small-group study.
The new Clinical Learning Center, a simulated clinic designed for
teaching patient communication and basic clinical skills, will
include 14 patient rooms outfitted with the latest digital recording
equipment and medical information technology resources, including an
electronic medical record system.
The research building will house 48 high-tech laboratories for the
advancement of research in biomedical science, geriatrics, rural
health, patient safety and many other areas.
A 300-seat auditorium, 150-seat lecture hall and several classrooms
for 40-60 students will accommodate the estimated 240 students who
eventually will be located on the main campus at any given time. The
medical school currently has 30 second-year students and 40
first-year students. A third class will be admitted in May.
Third- and fourth-year education will take place in community
settings at the school's regional campuses in Orlando, Pensacola and
Tallahassee.
Project architects are Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaum Inc., in
association with Elliot Marshall Innes, PA. Construction is a joint
venture of Centex Rooney Construction Co. and LLT Building
Corporation.
|