SCRA MUSC Innovation Center breaks ground on Meeting Street in Charleston

By Chelsea Hadaway
chadaway@scbiznews.com
Published March 16, 2009

The SCRA MUSC Innovation Center, envisioned as an incubator for the region’s burgeoning knowledge-based economy, broke ground Friday on the renovation of the former Weil’s Sleep Products mattress factory on Meeting Street.

Slated to open later this year, the center is a partnership between the S.C. Research Authority and the Medical University of South Carolina to provide a space for biotech startups.

Researchers and entrepreneurs voiced a need for such space with the level of research coming out of MUSC, said Steve Lanier, associate provost for research at the university. This center will provide a place to “nurture, sustain and retain” biotech entrepreneurs, he said.

SCRA MUSC Innovation Center1

S.C. Research Authority CEO Bill Mahoney (from left), Charleston Mayor Joe Riley, Dixon Woodward of Carolina First, Choate Construction’s Matt Brewer, Clay Middleton from U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn’s office and Steve Lanier, among others, attend the groundbreaking at the former mattress factory. (Photo/Chelsea Hadaway)

In addition to supporting the breakthroughs that come out of MUSC and adding to the knowledge economy in the Lowcountry, the Innovation Center also will have a “transformative effect on this neighborhood,” Charleston Mayor Joe Riley said.

The building — on upper Meeting Street where the ramps for Interstate 26 flow up and down — will house a police substation and a community meeting room, as well as the lab and equipment space.

The former factory will be completely renovated and restored. The original windows will be replicated and replaced, as will fixtures within the building, said Catherine Williams, spokeswoman for Choate Construction, the general contractor for the project. The interior also will have new mechanical, electrical, plumbing and fire suppression systems.

Bill Mahoney, CEO of SCRA, said he hopes this is just the beginning for biotech innovation centers in the area and that many more will follow in the coming years.

Riley agreed, saying Charleston should become a “national biotech and life sciences center.”

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Comments:

Added: 16 Mar 2009

This is good news and a positive for all of the Lowcountry. The ability to attract companies is taking a step forward thanks to SCRA, MUSC, and The Charleston Digital Corridor. Good Luck. Alan St.Clair

Alan St.Clair


Added: 17 Mar 2009

This is indeed a welcomed and significant step in the effort to retain home grown ideas and allow them to develop into companies that will only strengthen the diversity of our community's economic engine. Hats off to the local leadership that had the vision to bring this idea to fruition!

Chad Vail


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