In late January, CARsgen Therapeutics, a biopharmaceutical company with operations in China and the U.S., started moving employees into a biomanufacturing facility in Durham, N.C., the company’s first such operations in North America.
CARsgen has clinical offices in Houston, and its holding company was founded in Shanghai in 2014. It is investing $157 million for the North Carolina campus, which is expected to eventually house 200 workers by 2026. That campus is being developed in two phases: the first (which opened officially on February 21) is a 37,000-sf research and development lab for early-stage manufacturing of chimeric antigen receptor T-cell (CAR-T) therapies that battle cancers. Upon FDA approval of those therapies, CARsgen will start construction on a 100,000-sf cGMP commercial manufacturing plant.
Jie Jia, PhD, CARsgen’s Vice President of Strategic Alliances and Operations, is hopeful that the factory can be started by late 2022.
This project is but the latest example of demand-driven construction of lab space. The Raleigh-Durham market is a hot bed for companies developing CAR-T therapies that use patient-derived T cells that are customized in the manufacturing process for each patient.
Jie tells BD+C that his company selected North Carolina’s Research Triangle for its campus because of its “local ecosystem” that, according to the North Carolina Biotechnology Center’s website, includes three comprehensive cancer centers—UNC Lineberger, Duke Cancer Institute, and Wake Forest Baptist Health—as well as the NC Rare Disease Network and the North Carolina Precision Health Collaborative.
CARsgen reportedly considered locating its facility in Maryland, which offered $35 million in incentives, but ultimately chose North Carolina, which offered a $2.2 million grant and tax reimbursement package over 12 years, according to the state’s Economic Development Partnership, which with NCBioTech and North Carolina’s Department of Commerce recruited the company.
Helping CARsgen with site selection was CRB, an AEC and consulting firm that specializes in life sciences projects. It has been working with CARsgen since late 2020 to develop the entire program in North Carolina. CRB is providing engineering, design, and construction services as part of a building team that includes EAS (prefabrication), Star Electric (electrical), Edwards Inc. (structural, demolition, and concrete), and Dagard (which provided the lab’s cleanroom wall and ceiling panel systems).
LAB FACILITY IS LIKE BUILDING AN OREO COOKIE IN REVERSE
The R&D facility is an adaptive reuse of what had been an office and warehouse built in the early 1990s. CARsgen singled out this building over several others it and CRB looked at, explains Jie, because “it could be transformed quickly.” But that didn’t necessarily mean easily.
The first building took 13 months from conception to occupancy, and construction started in July 2021, says Ryan Lowder, DBIA, Project Director for CRB. The design team considered 15 different floor plans, as CARsgen at first preferred a smaller facility. “It realized that its plans needed to expand to accommodate the number of patients it would be creating drugs for,” Lowder explains.
The project’s biggest challenge, says A.L. Nesbitt, CRB’s Project Management Group Lead, was getting the floors to the height needed for HVAC systems the cleanroom required. This single-story building had an interior ceiling height of 18 feet, “which wasn’t optimal,” laments Lowder. The headroom space for the lab’s cleanroom is a tight nine feet, six inches, says Nesbitt.
In addition, the building team had to refortify the building’s floor slab—which over the years had been cut up into pieces for multiple tenants—to support new equipment plus dead loads like ductwork.
In adapting the building, CRB deployed its ONEsolution integrated project delivery (IPD) approach. Lowder elaborates that the building used a “self-supporting” modular cleanroom system, so that everything else in the lab could be installed first to meet timelines and the space available. “It was like building an Oreo cookie in reverse,” he quips. Abetting this approach was offsite manufacturing, by EAS, of ductwork, pipe racks, and other components that were assembled into five large sections and then transported to the jobsite for installation.
Nesbitt observes that developers of offices and labs are scrambling to get into cleanroom construction. CRB, which already had the expertise, was “lucky” to be working with CARsgen, “that was willing to be innovative,” she says. Jie adds that his company is receptive to adaptive reuse for future expansion. But supply chain snags for materials pose dilemmas. “So we have to get into projects earlier,” he says. That’s especially true for a biopharm company whose business model success hinges on speed to market.
Related Stories
Design Innovation Report | Apr 27, 2023
BD+C's 2023 Design Innovation Report
Building Design+Construction’s Design Innovation Report presents projects, spaces, and initiatives—and the AEC professionals behind them—that push the boundaries of building design. This year, we feature four novel projects and one building science innovation.
Sustainability | Apr 20, 2023
13 trends, technologies, and strategies to expect in 2023
Biophilic design, microgrids, and decarbonization—these are three of the trends, technologies, and strategies IMEG’s market and service leaders believe are poised to have a growing impact on the built environment.
Design Innovation Report | Apr 19, 2023
HDR uses artificial intelligence tools to help design a vital health clinic in India
Architects from HDR worked pro bono with iKure, a technology-centric healthcare provider, to build a healthcare clinic in rural India.
Healthcare Facilities | Apr 17, 2023
UC Irvine takes sustainability to new level with all-electric medical center
The University of California at Irvine (UCI) has a track record for sustainability. Its under-construction UCI Medical Center is designed, positioned, and built to preserve the nearby San Joaquin Marsh Reserve, to reduce the facility’s solar gain by 85%, and to be the first medical center in the country to operate on an all-electric central plant.
Healthcare Facilities | Apr 13, 2023
Healthcare construction costs for 2023
Data from Gordian breaks down the average cost per square foot for a three-story hospital across 10 U.S. cities.
Healthcare Facilities | Apr 13, 2023
Urgent care facilities: Intentional design for mental and behavioral healthcare
The emergency department (ED) is the de-facto front door for behavior health crises, and yet these departments are understaffed, overwhelmed, and ill-equipped to navigate the layered complexities of highly demanding physical and behavioral health needs.
Urban Planning | Apr 12, 2023
Watch: Trends in urban design for 2023, with James Corner Field Operations
Isabel Castilla, a Principal Designer with the landscape architecture firm James Corner Field Operations, discusses recent changes in clients' priorities about urban design, with a focus on her firm's recent projects.
Market Data | Apr 11, 2023
Construction crane count reaches all-time high in Q1 2023
Toronto, Seattle, Los Angeles, and Denver top the list of U.S/Canadian cities with the greatest number of fixed cranes on construction sites, according to Rider Levett Bucknall's RLB Crane Index for North America for Q1 2023.
Contractors | Apr 10, 2023
What makes prefabrication work? Factors every construction project should consider
There are many factors requiring careful consideration when determining whether a project is a good fit for prefabrication. JE Dunn’s Brian Burkett breaks down the most important considerations.
Architects | Apr 6, 2023
New tool from Perkins&Will will make public health data more accessible to designers and architects
Called PRECEDE, the dashboard is an open-source tool developed by Perkins&Will that draws on federal data to identify and assess community health priorities within the U.S. by location. The firm was recently awarded a $30,000 ASID Foundation Grant to enhance the tool.