Generated by GPT-5-mini| Mount Sinai Research Building | |
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| Name | Mount Sinai Research Building |
| Location | Manhattan, New York City |
| Completion date | 2007 |
| Owner | Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai |
| Architect | Davis Brody Bond |
Mount Sinai Research Building is a biomedical research facility affiliated with the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in Manhattan, New York City. The building supports translational research in clinical medicine, molecular biology, genomics, immunology, neuroscience, and population health, serving faculty, trainees, and collaborators across multiple institutions. It integrates laboratory suites, core facilities, clinical trial units, and administrative offices to advance basic science and clinical applications through partnerships with universities, hospitals, philanthropic organizations, and industry.
The building was developed during a period of expansion for the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai and opened in the late 2000s amid institutional growth that involved the Mount Sinai Health System, Mount Sinai Hospital, The Mount Sinai Medical Center, and Sinai Medical. Its development drew on funding and strategic planning connected with the Icahn family, Mount Sinai's leadership, the New York City economic development ecosystem, and philanthropic donors who previously supported projects at Rockefeller University, Columbia University, and NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital. The project intersected with urban planning initiatives overseen by the New York City Department of Buildings, the Manhattan Community Board, and the New York State Public Authorities Control Board while coordinating with neighboring institutions such as Rockefeller University, Weill Cornell Medical College, NYU Langone Health, and Columbia University Irving Medical Center. During its history, the facility has hosted visiting scholars from Harvard Medical School, Stanford University School of Medicine, Massachusetts General Hospital, Brigham and Women's Hospital, and the National Institutes of Health.
Designed by Davis Brody Bond, the structure reflects contemporary laboratory planning principles influenced by precedents at the Broad Institute, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, and Salk Institute. Facilities include wet labs, BSL-2 suites, imaging cores with confocal and electron microscopy similar to those at the Max Planck Institute and University of California, San Francisco, as well as computational clusters comparable to those used at the European Bioinformatics Institute and the Wellcome Sanger Institute. Core services feature flow cytometry, proteomics, genomics, and biostatistics units that collaborate with the New York Genome Center, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, and the Cancer Research UK network. The building incorporates vivaria and preclinical spaces modeled on platforms at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, alongside clinical research units that interface with the Mount Sinai Hospital outpatient network and emergency department. Sustainability and mechanical systems reflect codes administered by the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers and standards referenced by the U.S. Green Building Council.
Research programs housed include molecular genetics groups with ties to Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and the Broad Institute; immunology and vaccine research teams reminiscent of those at the Jenner Institute and Walter Reed Army Institute of Research; neuroscience centers with thematic overlap with the Allen Institute for Brain Science and the Kavli Institute for Brain Science; and precision medicine initiatives paralleling efforts at the All of Us Research Program and the Precision Medicine Initiative. Centers within the building coordinate clinical trials with the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and the Food and Drug Administration, and engage in multi-institutional consortia such as the Cancer Genome Atlas, ENCODE, and the Human Cell Atlas. Training programs connect trainees to visiting programs at Yale School of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, and the University of Chicago Medicine.
The facility operates as part of the Mount Sinai Health System and collaborates with Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai faculty, Mount Sinai Hospital clinical services, and the Mount Sinai Morningside campus. It has formal partnerships and research agreements with Columbia University, Weill Cornell Medicine, NewYork-Presbyterian, Memorial Sloan Kettering, Rockefeller University, NYU Langone Health, the New York Genome Center, and the Flatiron Health network. International collaborations include ties to the Karolinska Institutet, University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Institut Pasteur, Max Planck Society, and the European Molecular Biology Laboratory. Industry partnerships have included pharmaceutical and biotechnology firms such as Pfizer, Moderna, Merck, AstraZeneca, and Genentech, as well as contract research organizations and venture capital networks active in the New York Life Sciences ecosystem.
Investigations conducted in the building have contributed to advances in genomic medicine, immuno-oncology, stem cell biology, and infectious disease research, complementing landmark studies published by teams affiliated with the Broad Institute, Harvard Medical School, and the Salk Institute. Research outputs have interfaced with clinical trial outcomes overseen by the National Cancer Institute and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and informed guidelines from agencies like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the World Health Organization. Collaborative projects with Memorial Sloan Kettering and the New York Genome Center have advanced tumor profiling and molecular diagnostics, while work in neuroscience has paralleled discoveries reported by the Allen Institute and NIH-funded consortia. Translational efforts have supported entrepreneurship, technology transfer, and licensing activity similar to that from Stanford University and MIT.
Located in Manhattan, the building is accessible via the New York City Subway system, including lines serving nearby hubs such as Penn Station and Grand Central Terminal, and by Metropolitan Transportation Authority bus routes that serve the Upper East Side and Midtown corridor. Regional access includes services from New Jersey Transit and the Port Authority Bus Terminal, while intercity connections are provided through Amtrak at Penn Station. Ground-level access and multimodal options align with city planning and transit-oriented development principles advocated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority and the New York City Department of Transportation. Parking, bicycle facilities, and commuter programs reflect institutional policies used by peer hospitals and research campuses across New York City.
Category:Research buildings in New York City