State-of-the-art laboratory space in Kapoor Hall will enhance
work in proteomics, protein therapeutics, pharmacogenomics and
clinical and translational research.
In a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by Lt. Gov. Robert J.
Duffy and other dignitaries, the pharmacy school officially opened
its new home, John and Editha Kapoor Hall, named for alumnus John
N. Kapoor and his late wife, Editha.
As a college graduate in India, Kapoor received a scholarship
from UB that allowed him to complete a doctoral degree in 1972. He
went on to great success as a pharmaceutical industry executive and
entrepreneur, but never forgot the university’s
generosity.
Beginning in 1986, through the John and Editha Kapoor Charitable
Foundation, he has given back to the pharmacy school to support
research, graduate fellowships and renovation of the South Campus
facility.
The result is a stronger faculty, more of the brightest students
and, now, a spectacular, high-tech facility for students and
faculty.
Kapoor Hall also represents a homecoming for the pharmacy
school, which was founded in 1886 on the South Campus, but spent
the past 35 years in Cooke and Hochstetter halls on the North
Campus. The university’s second-oldest entity, next to
medicine, UB Pharmacy is the first professional school in three
decades to return to the city of Buffalo.
President Satish K. Tripathi praises New York State’s
investment in higher education, and notes the importance of the new
building not only to the pharmacy school, but to the creation of
the health care expertise it will generate for Western New York and
beyond.
“This remarkable building is a key example of how New York
State’s strategic investments are creating great
opportunities and furthering significant progress for UB and the
region—and far beyond. And more specifically, this new
facility is an outstanding example of the forward movement that UB
2020 brings to the entire university,” Tripathi says.
“Kapoor Hall will function as the center for new research
and new discoveries, fueling development of new businesses,
products and economic opportunities here in Western New York while
addressing the most challenging health care issues that we face as
a society. It’s a world-class facility that will continue Dr.
Kapoor’s legacy for generations to come, and it’s an
investment in the future of our university and our
communities—one that highlights UB’s national and
global impact as a major research university,” he says.
Wayne K. Anderson, dean of the pharmacy school since 1995, notes
that tomorrow’s ribbon-cutting “will open more than
this spectacular new facility; it also begins a new era for our
nationally ranked school.”
“With a tailor-made new home to accommodate the next
generation of pharmacy professionals, our school is considerably
stronger in our mission: to prepare our students to be future
leaders in their fields,” Anderson says.
UB Pharmacy ranks 17th in the United States and is the only
pharmacy school in the SUNY system.
William Jusko, SUNY Distinguished Professor and chair of the
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences, says Kapoor Hall ensures the
school’s success in its mission “to create future
generations of superior pharmacy practitioners and pharmaceutical
scientists.”
“The modern and efficient research and computer facilities
will promote further growth in the scientific capabilities of our
faculty and staff, and especially for our trainees, our hundreds of
bright and capable students,” he says.
Designed by SLAM Collaborative, the 147,000-square-foot
structure is targeting silver certification from Leadership in
Energy and Environmental Design (LEED), a green building national
rating system that provides standards for environmentally
sustainable construction.
New York State provided $46 million of the $62 million project,
with the rest coming from UB and private philanthropy; several of
the building’s signature spaces are donor-funded, including
the Panasci Atrium, the school’s informational and social
crossroads, and a group of patient assessment and counseling rooms,
where students’ practice interactions with patients can be
videotaped for later discussion.
Kapoor Hall is one element of a much larger and ongoing effort
to reinvest in UB’s South Campus. The UB 2020 strategic plan,
with support from the NYSUNY 2020 legislation signed into law last
year by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, calls for enhancements that will
revitalize the quality of life on the campus and in the surrounding
University Heights neighborhood.
Other construction projects include renovation of Hayes and
Crosby halls, home to the UB School of Architecture and Planning,
as well as basic infrastructure improvements to sidewalks and
roadways, exterior light and electric power systems.
Throughout the university, new faculty members are being hired,
and new courses and programs are enriching the educational
experiences of students.
For Kayla Maxwell, a PharmD and PhD student who was fascinated
by chemical interactions as a child, the new Kapoor Hall, with all
its contemporary features, is “biochemically speaking, the
icing on the cake” of the top-notch education she and other
pharmacy students are receiving at UB.
“We are so fortunate to be learning in such streamlined,
attractive settings, making use of new technology to learn the
latest scientific methods,” she says. “I want to thank
the State of New York, John Kapoor and all the donors for giving us
the best in higher education. We pledge to make the most of
it.”