| Hong Kong X The University of California,
Berkeley, announced today (Monday, June 20) that it has received
a $40 million gift from the Li Ka Shing Foundation to establish
a research center focusing on creating solutions to today's major
health problems.
In recognition of Li's generosity, the university will name the
new facility the Li Ka-Shing Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences.
The donation is the largest international gift in the history
of UC Berkeley and will allow the campus to start planning for
the Li Ka-Shing Center for
Biomedical and Health Sciences, which will replace Warren Hall. Groundbreaking
for the $160
million research building, one of the cornerstones of the campus's Health
Sciences Initiative, is slated for 2007, with construction to be
completed in 2009.
"This is a major gift that not only sets us on the critical path to completing
the building phase of the Health Sciences Initiative, but also represents a strong
endorsement from a world-leading philanthropist for the innovative and progressive
biomedical science program at UC Berkeley," said UC Berkeley Chancellor
Robert J. Birgeneau.
Meeting with Birgeneau in Hong Kong, Li said today that he became
impressed with UC Berkeley's achievement in medical research when
he first met with
former UC
Berkeley Chancellor Robert M. Berdahl in 2004. "I am a firm believer
in the spirit of public-private partnership, and I am
excited by the advanced work Berkeley is undertaking. The work and research
being done there will result in phenomenal benefits to mankind."
The Li Ka-Shing Center for Biomedical and Health Sciences will
house the Henry H. Wheeler Jr. Brain Imaging Center, part of the
Helen Wills
Neuroscience
Institute,
as well as scientists tackling the complexities of cancer, brain diseases
such as Alzheimer's disease, infectious diseases such as the worldwide
killers HIV
and dengue fever, and stem cell biology.
"With advances in molecular biology, genomics, stem cell biology, computer
sciences, tissue engineering, chemistry and the physical sciences all converging
on biomedical problems, UC Berkeley is poised with the best human resources to
mount a coordinated attack on the killer diseases of the world," said Robert
Tjian, UC Berkeley professor of molecular and cell biology and faculty director
of the initiative. "Both Li and the foundation have demonstrated an uncanny
and profound appreciation for UC Berkeley's mission V to provide the highest
quality research and teaching to the largest population of gifted students."
Li Ka-Shing, one of the world's leading philanthropists and entrepreneurs,
maintains a long-standing commitment to the advancement of education
and the healthcare
sciences, in part because he was forced to abandon his formal education
at the age of 12 when his father died of illness. In 1980, he established
the
Li Ka
Shing Foundation to coordinate support of education and medical
care as "twin
pillars of society." Last month, he donated $128 million, the largest contribution
in the history of Asia, to the medical program at the University of Hong Kong.
Li's involvement with UC Berkeley started in 1998 when the foundation
provided $100,000 for two years of support for the Berkeley Scholars
Program. Prior
to this latest gift, the foundation's contributions to UC Berkeley
totaled $1.4
million, including an endowment for the Li Ka-Shing Chair in Health
Management at the Haas School of Business.
"Li and his foundation have had a continuing interest in supporting UC Berkeley,
in part because he believes in world-class research and teaching that is conducted
in a public university," said Randy Schekman, UC Berkeley professor of molecular
and cell biology and chair of the Chancellor's Advisory Committee on Biology. "He
also has a great interest in using his resources and philanthropy to help develop
a better understanding of disease mechanisms and to encourage innovative new
treatments."
The campus's Health Sciences Initiative was launched in 1999
to apply state-of-the-art tools in the physical sciences and engineering
to
the most pressing problems
of biomedicine.
"The Health Sciences Initiative culminates almost a decade of planning,
recruiting, building and adjusting, and, ultimately, revolutionizing our vision
of how biomedical science should and will be done in the 21st century," Tjian
said. "The Health Sciences Initiative is essential for UC Berkeley and a
great benefit to the world because, for the first time, we have been able to
bring together in a highly collaborative and coordinated fashion the high quality
research and teaching that traditionally spans disparate sets of disciplines
V that is, biology, chemistry, physics, engineering, computer science and public
health."
The first phase of the Health Sciences Initiative resulted in
the creation of the UC Berkeley branch of the Institute for Quantitative
Biomedical
Research (QB3), one of four California Institutes for Science and
Innovation established
by the state in 2000. At the eastern entrance to the campus is
rising a home for that institute V the Stanley Biosciences and
Bioengineering
Facility
V that
is set to house "a powerful collection of world-class physical scientists
to work on structural biology, bioinformatics, bioengineering, molecular imaging,
single molecule measurements and synthetic biology," Tjian
said.
While phase 1 is about developing the tools, Tjian noted,
phase
2 is about attacking disease. The Li Ka-Shing Center for Biomedical
and
Health Sciences
will complement
QB3 by emphasizing a deep
understanding of the molecular mechanisms of disease, with a focus
on cancer, the brain, infectious agents and, most importantly,
stem cell
biology.
Integration of the research in QB3 and in the Li Ka-Shing Center
for Biomedical and Health Sciences is the essence of the Health
Sciences Initiative, he
added. The important next phase, he said, will be to continue building
the interdisciplinary
research program by recruiting new faculty and students, establishing
state-of-the-art research labs with specialized facilities, such
as
stem cell laboratories,
and initiating new courses to train future scientists.
"This mission of public universities like UC Berkeley benefits not only
the students but the economy, both locally and globally, by creating the environment
for industries to flourish, such as biotechnology, information technology and
the applications of stem cell research for the future," Chancellor Birgeneau
said.
"Li is an extraordinarily successful businessman who comes from humble beginnings
and clearly sees the value and unique contributions of a public institution like
UC Berkeley," Tjian said. "I guess you could say that he sees that
we are at the very top of universities worldwide in terms of educational quality,
but at the bottom in terms of cost. This allows UC Berkeley to be accessible
to students globally, but especially to those from the Pacific Rim. Otherwise,
these talented students might not be able to afford to attend expensive private
universities."
Jun 20, 2005
Previous
|