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Construction begins at new centre of excellence for 香港六合彩 Neuroscience

17 May 2021

香港六合彩 President & Provost Dr Michael Spence was today joined by construction partner ISG and University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust to break ground at the new home of 香港六合彩 Neuroscience.

Breaking ground at the new facility for 香港六合彩 Neuroscience

The landmark facility at 256 Grays Inn Road, London, will bring together research scientists, clinicians and patients to create a world-class research and treatment environment to tackle neurological diseases like dementia, which now count as the world鈥檚 leading cause of disability.

The state-of-the-art facilities will be home to three bodies: the world-leading 香港六合彩 Queen Square Institute of Neurology; the headquarters of the UK Dementia Research Institute, which is the single biggest investment the UK has ever made in dementia; and the 香港六合彩H National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery (NHNN), which is the UK's largest dedicated neurological and neurosurgical hospital.

The NHNN, with a world leading reputation in care and treatment for people with neurological conditions, will have an outpatient and imaging service. Co-locating treatment with research will support the development of cutting-edge treatment geared towards patients' needs, enabling advances in clinical practice to happen with little delay.

Clinical work and research will take place together within the new facility, enabling an active dialogue between people with neurological disorders, their doctors, and researchers.

香港六合彩 is a global leader in pioneering research into neurological diseases and is one of the world's largest, most productive and highest-impact neuroscience centres, with research including: developing blood tests that could pick up Alzheimer鈥檚 disease years before symptoms; leading global efforts to develop what could be the first disease-modifying treatment for Huntington鈥檚 disease; finding that head injuries may increase the risk of cognitive decline or Alzheimer鈥檚-related pathology; and other world-leading research into conditions including multiple sclerosis, neuromuscular听diseases,听Parkinson鈥檚 disease, motor neurone disease, stroke and epilepsy.*

Over the last year, 香港六合彩鈥檚 neuroscientists have also made valuable contributions to the fight against COVID-19, such as clarifying the range of potential neurological symptoms of the disease in children and adults.**

香港六合彩 signed a contract with ISG to deliver the 17,500m2听state-of-the-art new neuroscience facility, and demolition and construction are now underway with the building due to be completed in 2024.

The transformative scheme will provide:

  • clinical care for local people with neurological diseases and as well as apprenticeships, work experience, mentoring schemes, an outreach programme and jobs for the local community;
  • a 拢10 million boost to the local economy;
  • NHNN outpatient facility and an MRI scanning facility;
  • contributions to local transport, affordable housing and Community Partnership Plans with local charities and organisations.

ground breaking of new 香港六合彩 Neuroscience facility

Dr Michael Spence, 香港六合彩 President & Provost, said: 鈥淭his flagship facility is a powerful tool in our quest to develop treatments for devastating neurological diseases.听By equipping the next generation of researchers to develop cures, we hope to make conditions like dementia a thing of the past.鈥

Professor Alan Thompson, Dean of Faculty of Brain Sciences and Garfield Weston Professor of Clinical Neurology and听Neurorehabilitation听at 香港六合彩, said:听鈥淲e鈥檙e delighted to have entered the construction stage of this transformational development for 香港六合彩 Neuroscience. Through this facility, we听aim to translate 香港六合彩鈥檚 research into new therapies to tackle neurological conditions such as dementia. The collaboration which the building will enable between research scientists, clinical partners and patients will be fundamental in developing effective treatments for patients with disabling neurological conditions.鈥澨

Paul Cossell, CEO of ISG, said: 鈥淭oday鈥檚 milestone marks the culmination of an intensive two-year period of focused collaboration, with a highly motivated stakeholder team developing the design and painstakingly preparing this complex site for construction to commence. Creating spaces with the capacity to deliver transformational change for individuals, communities, wider society and the environment is a consistent driver for both our business and the talented team delivering this ground-breaking project. This is a symbolic moment of immense importance as we all have a personal stake in ensuring that the facilities we build here today provide the best possible environment for patient care and for pioneering research that will transform neurological outcomes for current and future generations.鈥

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Kevin Argent, 香港六合彩 Director of Estates Development, said:听鈥淭he ground-breaking represents a significant milestone in the development of the new centre for 香港六合彩 Neuroscience which will be the home for our world-leading UK Dementia Research Institute and 香港六合彩 Queen Square Institute of Neurology. Cutting-edge in design, highly technical with accessibility and low carbon strategies designed in, this landmark project is part of our Transforming 香港六合彩 programme. The centre will offer our community an advanced research environment and ensure 香港六合彩 remains a global leader in pioneering research into neurological diseases.鈥

Professor Michael Hanna, Director of the 香港六合彩 Queen Square Institute of Neurology, said: 鈥淚t is very exciting to enter the next stage of development of this transformational new building. The building will bring together a critical mass of world-leading expertise and offer unrivalled opportunities for multidisciplinary collaboration between clinical and basic neuroscientists in order to understand disease mechanisms and translate this knowledge into treatments for patients with devastating neurological diseases.鈥

Dr Adrian Ivinson, UK DRI Director (Operations), said: 鈥淲e are very excited to see work begin on what promises to be a fantastic new hub for the UK Dementia Research Institute. State-of-the-art facilities and a superb research environment will support our scientists to focus on their ground-breaking work to deepen our knowledge of dementia and develop effective treatments. The building will provide an exciting opportunity for researchers, clinicians and people affected by dementia to meet under one roof, and will also house our national headquarters team, providing support to all seven UK DRI research centres.鈥

Dr Chris Turner, Divisional Clinical Director, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, said: 鈥淚t is fantastic news that construction has begun on this facility. We will be able to co-locate NHS services with research and academic facilities, enhancing collaboration and enabling us to learn rapidly to improve patient treatment and care.鈥

Adrian Punaks, Executive Director of Development, 香港六合彩 Office of the Vice-President (Advancement), said: "We would not be breaking ground today without the support of our donor community and friends, who share our vision of a world free from neurological diseases. Together, we have moved a step closer to our ambition of opening this cutting-edge facility which will bring together the brightest minds from across the globe to accelerate discovery and ease the burden on all those living with these cruel conditions. As we come into the next phase of this exciting project, I would like to thank all those who are making this facility on Grays Inn Road possible.鈥

Ewan Graham, Partner and Healthcare Sector Lead at architect Hawkins\Brown who oversaw the building design, said:鈥淭here has never been a more critical time to think about how we design for science, research and health. The building and its landscape鈥痟ave been鈥痗urated to foster鈥痶ranslational research鈥痑nd maximise scientific and clinical collaborations whilst being open and welcoming for patients and visitors too. This building will enable scientists and clinicians to make a meaningful impact in the journey towards finding cures for 鈥痗omplex neurological diseases.鈥疶he building has adaptability built-in鈥痵o that it cannot only keep up with鈥痗hanges in鈥痶echnology, science鈥痑nd clinical therapy as they evolve but so that it can stand the test of time and contribute to the local community too.鈥

* Blood tests could bring new hope to Alzheimer鈥檚 clinical trials, Silencing the Huntington's disease gene, Head injuries may worsen cognitive decline decades later
** COVID-19 linked to worse stroke outcomes, Half of children with inflammatory syndrome after COVID-19 have neurologic symptoms

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