Animal facility goes underground

The University of Iowa has gotten the green light to build a subterranean vivarium that will house experimental animals to be used in biomedical research and offer an extra measure of protection from animal rights extremists. The Iowa Board of Regents linkurl:approved;http://www2.state.ia.us/regents/Meetings/DocketMemos/09Memos/June/0609_ITEM12.pdf $11.2 million for the roughly 35,000 square foot facility -- which will lie under a grassy courtyard bordered by three research buildings -- last we

Written byBob Grant
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The University of Iowa has gotten the green light to build a subterranean vivarium that will house experimental animals to be used in biomedical research and offer an extra measure of protection from animal rights extremists. The Iowa Board of Regents linkurl:approved;http://www2.state.ia.us/regents/Meetings/DocketMemos/09Memos/June/0609_ITEM12.pdf $11.2 million for the roughly 35,000 square foot facility -- which will lie under a grassy courtyard bordered by three research buildings -- last week. "Security is a huge issue with regard to biomedical research," the university's vice president for research, Jordan Cohen, told the regents, according to the linkurl:__Des Moines Register__.;http://www.desmoinesregister.com/article/20090611/NEWS/90611013
Image: By Aaron Logan
Paul Cooper, director of the university's Office of Animal Resources, told __The Scientist__ that while protecting the facility against attacks from animal rights groups wasn't the primary impetus for putting the lab underground, its underground location "is an extra measure of security." In 2004, animal rights activists broke into animal research laboratories on the University of Iowa campus, destroying computers and laboratory equipment and stealing experimental animals. Damages sustained during the attack, for which the Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility, cost the university about $425,000. Cooper noted that the vivarium will house mainly mice but that other species, such as sheep, pigs, rabbits, and non-human primates, will also reside there. He added that its centralized location will aid biomedical researchers. "It's something that a large research institution would prefer," said Cooper, who is also the university's attending veterinarian, "instead of having a facility here and a facility there." The university decided to add the underground vivarium to a $122.5 million plan to build the Iowa Institute for Biomedical Discovery (IIBD) on the campus, which the board approved last year. The shell space for the animal housing facility will be completed before the IIBD is fully constructed to allow builders access to the courtyard. Construction crews have not yet broken ground on either the IIBD or the vivarium, but Cooper said that both construction projects are slated to begin within the next six to twelve months. The IIBD will likely be completed by 2013 and the vivarium shell will be outfitted with animal housing facilities, cage washing facilities, an aseptic surgery space, and other features at some later date.
**__Related stories:__***linkurl:Primate lab slapped by USDA;http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/55688/
[12th May 2009]*linkurl:Animal rights activists charged;http://www.the-scientist.com/blog/display/55651/
[21st April 2009]
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Meet the Author

  • From 2017 to 2022, Bob Grant was Editor in Chief of The Scientist, where he started in 2007 as a Staff Writer. Before joining the team, he worked as a reporter at Audubon and earned a master’s degree in science journalism from New York University. In his previous life, he pursued a career in science, getting a bachelor’s degree in wildlife biology from Montana State University and a master’s degree in marine biology from the College of Charleston in South Carolina. Bob edited Reading Frames and other sections of the magazine.

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