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When the Brigham’s newest building opens in the fall of 2016, it will be a hub for state-of-the-art labs, outpatient clinical space and advanced imaging facilities. It will also be home to researchers and clinicians from across many disciplines with a shared vision for collaboration, acceleration and translation of laboratory discoveries into novel treatments for patients. In the months leading up to the building’s opening, this series will feature several major research areas that will be brought together in the new space.

BBF4A Bright Future for Orthopaedic Collaboration

First in a series about the new building, this story explores what the new building will mean for basic research, clinical care and outcomes research for orthopaedics.

 

Caroline Owen’s laboratory, currently located at the Harvard Institutes of Medicine on Blackfan Circle, will move to the Brigham Building for the Future later this year. Owen and her team, pictured from left to right: Xiaoyun Wang, PhD; Joseph Adedigba; Caroline Owen, MD, PhD; Joselyn Rojas-Quintero, MD; Ilyas Yambavey, MD; and Francesca Polverino, MD. Not pictured: Osagu Odeh

Pulmonary Researchers Ready for Move into New Space

The second in a series about the new building, this story explores what the new building will mean for Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine research.

 

The current iHub space, shown here, will have a new home in the BBF.Brigham Innovation Hub Will Bring Ideas to the New Building

The Brigham Innovation Hub team is looking forward to innovating in a new, permanent space in the new building.

 

 

BBF_ironmovein_4Cutting-Edge Technologies Available in the New Building

When the building opens this fall, clinicians and researchers will have access to advanced tools and opportunities to collaborate and push the boundaries of discovery in ways that have never been possible before.

 

 

Pei Tong, PhD, and Colby Devereaux of the Wesemann lab in the Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy.

Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy Finally Under One Roof

This story highlights what the new building will mean for clinicians and researchers in the Division of Rheumatology, Immunology and Allergy.

 

A New Home for the Neurosciences

Neuroscience represents the biggest research area moving into the new building, and its clinicians and researchers plan to enhance communication and promote collaboration with many other departments.