Integrative physiology building gets 鈥榯opped out鈥 and feted
Popular program to get improved digs with $21.8 million facility expansion
Construction of a new 精品SM在线影片 integrative physiology building reached a literal apex today, as the final steel beam was ceremoniously signed and laid atop the new structure.

Provost Russell Moore signs the final beam to be placed in the building. 精品SM在线影片 photo by Casey Cass.
A formal topping-off event was held at the site, home to a new $21.8 million expansion of the Ramaley Biology Building. Integrative physiology provides a foundation for future doctors and nurses, and a firm basis for varied health professions and pursuits. It also provides a strong foundation for careers in basic physiological science.
Researchers in the department are known for their work on听sleep deprivation, how听light disrupts sleep in children, potential听ways to slow vascular aging, and how a bacterium found in soil could听treat PTSD and depression.
Topping-off ceremonies derive from Scandinavia and date to the Dark Ages, but today鈥檚 event focused on the future.
鈥淭his new facility will serve new generations of students, faculty and staff, and make new innovations in a vital discipline that has become one of the most popular majors at 精品SM在线影片, as well as a dynamic gateway to the health professions,鈥 said 精品SM在线影片 Provost Russell Moore.听
鈥淎s a faculty member in integrative physiology, I am personally delighted to see where the department has arrived, and how it is captivating new generations of students.鈥澨

By the numbers: This bar chart shows some key metrics of the integrative physiology expansion, so far. The nine animals spotted at the construction site included six raccoons, two squirrels and one bear.
Moore was one of several dignitaries attending the event. Others included听Ann Schmiesing, senior vice provost for academic resource management; Mark Opp, chair of integrative physiology; and John Pittman, president of the Fransen Pittman construction company.听听
Attendees signed final piece of structural steel, which was then lifted into place for the building.听
鈥淭his new state-of-the-art facility will enable a program that is already on the cutting edge to continue its leadership and take its research and discovery to a new level,鈥 Opp听said. 鈥淎nd it creates a central home for integrative physiology that is reflective of the program鈥檚 reputation and strengthens its identity on campus.鈥
The project includes 27,000 square feet of new construction that will create new state-of-the-art research space for a department that serves the second-most undergraduate majors of any program on campus. The project is slated for completion in spring 2020.
The building, being erected just north of Norlin Library, will function as a long-awaited hub for department activity.听
The Department of Integrative Physiology was formed in 2003 by unifying the former Department of Kinesiology and Applied Physiology with parts of the former Department of Environmental, Population, and Organismic Biology. It quickly became one of the largest undergraduate degrees on campus鈥攖hough the department was never joined physically.听
For more than 15 years the department has had no administrative hub and has been running its research, teaching and administration primarily out of Carlson Gymnasium, Ramaley Biology, Clare Small and sites on the 精品SM在线影片 East Campus.听
鈥淚ntegrative physiology has been operating an outstanding research program from an old gymnasium for over a decade,鈥 James W.C. White, interim dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, noted this year. 鈥淧roviding them with a proper research facility is sure to elicit some truly exciting breakthroughs.鈥

Workers maneuver the final beam into place during a topping-off ceremony for the new extension to the Ramaley Biology building at 精品SM在线影片. Photo by Casey Cass
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