New Science Building opens doors to expanded life science innovation in Mississauga and beyond
University of Toronto Mississauga has significantly expanded its capacity to drive innovation in the life sciences with the highly anticipated opening of its latest building.
The official opening of the New Science Building (NSB) on September 20, answered the urgent need for investment in state-of-the-art wet labs, a high-performance computing data centre, and other advanced infrastructure to enable cutting-edge life science research happening at UTM.
“The opening of the New Science Building is a tremendous accomplishment for the
University of Toronto Mississauga, the wider U of T and the Greater Toronto Area,” said U of T President Meric Gertler. “It confirms and advances our position as a global powerhouse of research and innovation.”
Alexandra Gillespie, vice-president, U of T and principal, UTM, shared the enthusiasm for UTM’s latest facility, which originated in the ambition to extend Mississauga’s national leadership in health-promoting research, teaching, and innovation.
“NSB will make a positive impact, both locally and globally,” she said. “It will open purpose-built spaces for researchers, trainees and entrepreneurs to confront urgent and enduring challenges, push the boundaries of scientific inquiry and change the world for the better.”
A remarkable space for scientific inquiry
The four-storey, 15,550-square-metre research facility, designed by KieranTimberlake Architects and supported by a $7 million gift from Orlando Corp., is the campus home to a range of life science research and entrepreneurship initiatives. This includes research in advanced diagnostics, cancer phototherapy, neuroscience, chronic pain treatment and drug discovery, among others.
One such space is the Centre for Medicinal Chemistry (CMC), an interdisciplinary centre for the development of new drugs targeting cancer and rare diseases. The CMC’s focus is on faster, less costly drug discovery by creating purpose-built compounds for advanced pre-clinical trials – the last stage in the drug development process before human testing and one that very few academic labs are equipped to reach. CMC also enables researchers to launch health-promoting companies which create highly skilled jobs in the community.
A collaborative hub for life science entrepreneurship
NSB is also home to several other hubs of scientific discovery and impact. U of T’s first wet lab incubator, SpinUp, addresses a critical gap in the life science entrepreneurship pipeline in the Toronto region – providing affordable wet lab space dedicated to early-stage founders while they mature their IP and look for investment.
SpinUp joins U of T’s ecosystem of more than a dozen incubators and accelerators – recognized as among the top five in the world for university startup incubators.
The Novo Nordisk Network for Healthy Populations, a collaborative initiative of UTM, the Temerty Faculty of Medicine and the Dalla Lana School of Public Health, also calls NSB home. Launched in 2021, the network leverages interdisciplinary collaboration of researchers with community organizations and policy-makers to accelerate on-the-ground diabetes research, education and outreach in Peel Region and beyond.
Canada’s leading forensic science program – the first such program in the country – can also be found in the new building.