
Workers “top off” new research facility
The Academic and
Research Center under construction on Ohio
University’s West Green reached
a milestone
recently.
The same week that
OU-HCOM’s
class of 2012 began their August anatomy
immersion, constructions workers “topped off’ the
new
building, being built to enhance collaborative
research and education between the medical college
and the Russ College of Engineering and Technology.
“Topping off” a
building is an old tradition among construction
workers. When the topmost structural element of a
multi-story building is in place, workers signify
the occasion by placing a small evergreen tree or
flag on top. The new ARC building has both. Often,
construction workers sign the last steel beam before
it is hoisted into place.
According to some
traditions, the tree symbolize that construction so
far has occurred without injury or death to the
workers, while others say it provides good luck to
the future inhabitants.
Scott L. Melnick
wrote in the December, 2000, issue of Modern
Steel Construction that the origin of the
practice is uncertain but likely traces back
thousands of years to either Scandinavians or
Germans, who often built with the plentiful
evergreen trees scattered throughout northern
Europe. Some legends, Melnick said, even date the
practice back to early Romans.
The ARC building,
designed by Columbus-based engineering and
architectural firm Burgess & Niple, cost $30 million
and will feature 100,000 square feet of
state-of-the-art integrated research space, designed
to facilitate development of new diagnostics,
therapeutics and treatment paradigms. The
Osteopathic Heritage Foundations and Russ College
alumnus Charles Stuckey and his wife, Marilyn,
donated a combined $15 million towards the
construction.
The space will host
and enhance collaboration among individuals from the
Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, the Russ College of
Engineering and , the College of Arts and Sciences
and the College of Health and Human Services. In
addition, scientists from university research
centers, such as the Edison Biotechnology Institute
and the Appalachian Rural Health Institute, will
conduct cross-disciplinary, collaborative research
within the new facility.
Construction is
expected to be completed in late 2009 and open for
academic use in early 2010.
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