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By Nancy Kinnally
October 27, 2004
FSU COLLEGE OF MEDICINE MOVES TO NEW $60 MILLION BUILDING COMPLEX
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Students, faculty and
staff of the Florida State University College of
Medicine are moving this week into the medical
school's new $60 million building complex on the
northwest corner of the FSU campus.
All administrative and faculty offices, research
labs, classrooms, and student community rooms, as
well as the Medical Library and the Clinical
Learning Center, are being relocated from the
college's transitional facilities in the former
FSU Developmental Research School, also known as
Florida High.
The move is expected to take a few weeks to
complete. The Medical Library and the Clinical
Learning Center begin operating in the new
building this week. Classes will be held in the
new buildings beginning the week of Nov. 8.
The three-story complex, which is designed to
evoke the Jacobean architecture of the historic
core of the FSU campus, includes an education and
administration building and a research building,
and will feature a 300-seat auditorium. The
auditorium and a second section of the research
building will be built over the next 15 months.
When complete, the 300,000-square-foot building
complex will enclose a central cloister.
The new medical school complex is designed to
accommodate an anticipated full enrollment of 240
first- and second-year students, as well as 50
Ph.D. students.
Third- and fourth-year medical students study at
the medical school's regional campuses in
Orlando, Pensacola, Sarasota and Tallahassee.
Students at all of the medical school's campuses
participate in classes together via
videoconferencing, and faculty and staff from
across the campuses use videoconferencing to
meet, plan curricula and conduct training. The
new building complex features improved
videoconferencing facilities with
state-of-the-art equipment.
The medical school's classrooms also feature the
latest instructional technology, including
wireless Internet access, LCD projectors, digital
recording equipment, and digital microscopy.
The FSU College of Medicine currently has 173
medical students in four classes, as well as five
Ph.D. students and six post-baccalaureate
students.
Tours of the new College of Medicine building
complex will be offered to the public beginning
in March.
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