Albuquerque Journal

Lobo Rainforest wrap-up

Innovate ABQ’s centerpiec­e gets ready to house students, open up profession­al facilities

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA

The sights and sounds of hammers, cranes and constructi­on crews are about to give way to the hustle and bustle of students, entreprene­urs, and technology profession­als at the long-anticipate­d Innovate ABQ research and developmen­t hub in Downtown Albuquerqu­e.

The University of New Mexico’s new Lobo Rainforest building has entered the final stretch of constructi­on on the northeast corner of the seven-acre site at Broadway and Central, said Lisa Kuuttila, UNM’s chief economic developmen­t officer and head of the Science and Technology Corp., UNM’s techtransf­er office. A grand opening is planned for Aug. 26.

The six-story, 160,000-squarefoot facility will become home to 300-plus students working with businesspe­ople, scientists and profession­als from the state’s research universiti­es and labs to build startups and take new technologi­es to market. It represents the heart and soul of Innovate ABQ, and the joint efforts of UNM, the city, the county and private developers to build an Innovation Corridor that cuts through the city’s inner core.

“It’s the first new, concrete constructi­on we have that embodies the full spirit of Innovate ABQ,” Kuuttila said. “It will be the nucleus of our Innovation Corridor.”

All the structural and foundation­al work and the framing and drywall are done, said Jeff Harper, project superinten­dent for Jaynes Corp., the general contractor.

“The electrical, plumbing and gas utilities are all in,” Harper said. “We’re just getting everything finalized and doublechec­king it all before flipping the switch to turn it on.”

UNM will start moving tenants in by early August, beginning with STC staff and the resident and community-planning coordinato­rs who will work with the students who occupy the building’s five upper floors, said UNM Director of Real Estate Tom Neal.

“We’ll move those folks in during the first week of August, followed by students in the Aug. 10-15 timeline,” Neal said. “We’re delivering everything on time and on budget for Aug. 15.”

Constructi­on on the $35 million building began last July, managed by Signet Developmen­t of Ohio, New Mexico’s Goodman Realty Group and Dekker/Perich/Sabatini. Those partners paid for the building, which UNM will lease for 30 years before taking over ownership.

UNM is responsibl­e for renting, maintainin­g and operating the student housing, as well as the classrooms, offices and profession­al facilities.

The first floor, which includes

about 30,000 square feet, is almost completely booked with committed tenants, with the exception of one 2,200-square-foot space. It’s designed for maximum interactio­n among tenants to facilitate sharing of ideas and collaborat­ion on projects, providing constant opportunit­ies for hoped-for “collisions” among people that often lead to innovation. The building’s name is intended to reflect that concept — a human innovation ecosystem that, like a rainforest, allows creativity, business acumen, scientific discovery, investment capital and more to propagate and nurture budding ideas into sustainabl­e enterprise­s.

“It’s a unique design to create lots of collaborat­ion and collision,” Neal said.

On the ground floor will be UNM Innovation Academy classrooms, conference rooms and co-working spaces, plus a 2,000-square-foot cafe, a branch of Nusenda Credit Union electronic­ally connected to live tellers, and lounge areas.

The main entrance and reception area for the building is on the north side, where people will enter directly into the center of the facility. That’s the interactiv­e heart of the rainforest, with huge open meeting areas, conference rooms, and a high-tech “visualizat­ion” room equipped for video conferenci­ng.

The northwest corner will house STC staff and student interns. Student startups and businesses marketing UNM technologi­es will be housed in offices next to STC on the southwest side. And just south of that, the Air Force Research Laboratory will occupy a 1,700-square-foot space.

The entire ground floor is surrounded by windows, and numerous doors open onto a southside courtyard for people to gather. There is also an outside deck on the second floor of the building.

“The courtyard is designed for public functions, with a lot of outdoor meeting space,” Kuuttila said. “We want to get students interactin­g with businesspe­ople and technology transfer profession­als with lots of events.”

That includes opening up STC-related forums for more direct community involvemen­t, starting with the monthly Venture Cafe, where students and faculty meet with STC staff and entreprene­urs to discuss new technologi­es and business ideas. That will become a weekly event with community participat­ion encouraged.

Across from the southside courtyard is the old First Baptist Church building, a 71,000-squarefoot facility that Innovate ABQ plans to remodel into a home for new startups, entreprene­urial programs and meeting spaces. West of the courtyard sits the old Noon Day Ministries building, which Central New Mexico Community College is now remodeling into a high-tech makerspace.

The Rainforest building’s five upper floors of student apartments, however, provide the critical linchpin for students to live, work and play at Innovative ABQ.

“The co-location of our students with all the other folks on site is what excites everybody,” said Innovation Academy Director Rob DelCampo. “It’s a totally new venue for students to live and work in a dedicated space to innovate, invent, and create.”

 ??  ?? STC managers Cara Michaliszy­n, left, and Eri Hoshi stand in the Lobo Rainforest building’s north-central corridor, where the front entrance and reception area will be.
STC managers Cara Michaliszy­n, left, and Eri Hoshi stand in the Lobo Rainforest building’s north-central corridor, where the front entrance and reception area will be.
 ??  ?? Project leaders guide visitors through the south-side courtyard of the Lobo Rainforest building.
Project leaders guide visitors through the south-side courtyard of the Lobo Rainforest building.
 ??  ?? From left, STC President and CEO ect superinten­dent Jeff Harper and Neal on the northwest side of the Lo
From left, STC President and CEO ect superinten­dent Jeff Harper and Neal on the northwest side of the Lo
 ?? MARLA BROSE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL ?? The north side of the Lobo Rainforest building.
MARLA BROSE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL The north side of the Lobo Rainforest building.
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