Formerly
known as the Broadway Research Building, the Edward Miller Research
Building is a 12 story modernist structure completed in 2003. Payette
Associates completed this high rise for University use and wet-lab
capacity.
The
Hunterian building was created for experimental work in surgery and
pathology; it was demolished in 1955. The Hunterian laboratory for
surgical and pathological research was
rebuilt on its original site in 1987, and the Hunterian Neurosurgical
Laboratory was reestablished in 1991, with a focus on novel treatments
for brain tumors.
The Traylor and Basic Science buildings are used for preclinical sciences and clinical investigations.
The four story Armstrong building houses state of th art medical educational facilities, including an anatomy lab. Dedicated in 2009, the building was designed with a join faculty from all disciplines together in a space where a fertile exchange of ideas can occur outside the classroom. The building features projection capabilities on all four walls and mobile podiums for instructors. There are large lecture halls, intimate learning studios, and private study areas. The building also features the digital communications technology, including virtual-reality simulations, MRI images, CT scans, surgical videos, and other 21st century reference tools.
All photos property of Ayers Saint Gross unless noted otherwise:
Sources: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10626949
http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/som/alumni/news/new_medical_education_building/
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