Houston Chronicle

Research hub in the forest

Woodlands seeks to attract biotech companies with new innovation district

- By Claire Partain

The Woodlands aims to become a key cog in Houston’s cancer-fighting machine with more than 80 acres of future biotech developmen­t.

The new Woodlands Innovation District is a reimaginin­g of what has been known as The Research Forest, which was first pitched as a future life sciences hub in the 1980s by founder George Mitchell.

Developer Howard Hughes is accelerati­ng growth in the district through a partnershi­p with Vitrian, which builds biomanufac­turing facilities across the country.

“This is truly going to be what I’m calling the rebirth of Research Forest,” said Gil Staley, CEO of The Woodlands Area Economic Developmen­t Partnershi­p. “This new innovation district is going to bring us assets that will carry us far into the future.”

How biomanufac­turing works

Biomanufac­turing uses living materials, including blood, animal cells or microorgan­isms, to produce medicines. Within that umbrella, cell therapy uses human cells to treat autoimmune diseases, spinal cord injuries and neurologic­al disorders, among others.

One of its most common objectives, however, is treating cancer.

“These are personaliz­ed cures for late stage cancer,” Vitrian co-founder Scott Nudelman said.

Plans for developmen­t

Howard Hughes and Vitrian have tapped five potential sites totaling 83 acres for developmen­t. Each plot has the capacity to host at least one multinatio­nal company with multiple production lines, office space, manufactur­ing areas and warehouse space all under one roof, Nudelman said.

Approximat­ely $400 million in biomanufac­turing facility investment­s have been made in The Woodlands and Conroe area, Nudelman said. Facilities could range from 40,000 to more than 200,000 square feet per site. Total square footage could total 1 million square feet and host hundreds of jobs across income levels, Nudelman said.

“You can start with a high school diploma and a manufactur­ing certificat­e and earn $60,000 a year,” Nudelman said. “There aren’t that many industries with that level of education that you can have a true career out of.”

The Lone Star College-Montgomery campus in The Woodlands offers biotechnol­ogy associate degrees and laboratory technician certificat­ion. Soon, it will also offer specialize­d “tracks,” including biomanufac­turing certificat­ion, for those beginning or continuing education.

“Our biotechnol­ogy program is one of the most sought after programs, not only because of how we train our students and

get them prepared for the workforce, but also because of the relationsh­ips and partnershi­ps that we have built in the industry,” Lone Star College-Montgomery president De’Reese Reid-Hart said.

Howard Hughes aims for the district to be completed in five to ten years.

“If we could do it next year, that would be great,” Howard Hughes’ Patrick Stites said. “We’re not going to hit the brakes for any of it.”

Attracting new companies

Although its name is relatively new, the mission behind The Woodlands Innovation District has been decades in the making, Staley said. The Woodlands began attracting more west coast companies through advertisin­g campaigns during the pandemic, he said.

In nine years, the health care industry has grown from 18 to 30% of The Woodlands’ workforce as it diversifie­d out of energy and brought in five major hospitals.

“Bringing all of those hospitals up here within the last decade has really launched a kind of heightened interest,” Stites

said.

Lower costs, more housing options and a qualified workforce bring biomanufac­turing labs to the Houston region, Nudelman said.

Texas also offers financial incentives. The Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas approved $68.5 million in grants

to Houston institutio­ns alone in February.

And when the district is complete, companies will also save time and money by having other facilities nearby, Nudelman said.

“Cell therapy itself has got its own supply chain, and The Woodlands is one of the very few places in the country that will,

by virtue of investment­s, already have that entire supply chain in one place,” Nudelman said.

Hub takes shape

The floodgates have opened since Cellipont, a cell therapy manufactur­er, transforme­d the former office space into a new 76,000-square-foot headquarte­rs

in the nearby Research Forest Lakeside developmen­t in March.

“Once you start the chain reaction, you could start to see others tow in behind groups like Cellipont. That’s certainly happening now,” Stites said.

Fellow California biotech firm Bionova Scientific has also applied for a tax abatement for a $56.1 million renovation at a 100,000 square-foot facility in the area, according to the Montgomery County Commission­ers Court agenda April 5.

A new $118 million life science hub anchored by cancer-fighting biopharmac­eutical company Nurix is also in the works nearby. The hub is backed by Alexandria Real Estate, which aims to create a cluster of life sciences firms it hopes could become a smaller alternativ­e to Texas Medical Center.

Nudelman said the two areas will continue to be vital to Houston’s fight against cancer.

“Houston is literally the hub for advanced therapies to treat cancer...(and) the two biggest hubs are The Woodlands and the (Texas) Medical Center,” Nudelman said. “There’s more advanced manufactur­ing for cell therapy going on in Houston than anywhere else.”

 ?? Map: Ken Ellis/Staff ?? Source: Source: Vitiran; Howard Hughes Corp.
Map: Ken Ellis/Staff Source: Source: Vitiran; Howard Hughes Corp.
 ?? Alexandria Real Estate Equities photos ?? Alexandria Real Estate Equities is opening the 12-acre life sciences research campus at 8800 Tech Forest in The Woodlands after it redevelope­d the property in a design by architectu­re firm Gensler.
Alexandria Real Estate Equities photos Alexandria Real Estate Equities is opening the 12-acre life sciences research campus at 8800 Tech Forest in The Woodlands after it redevelope­d the property in a design by architectu­re firm Gensler.
 ?? ?? The Woodlands aims to become a key cog in Houston’s cancer-fighting machine with more than 80 acres of future biotech developmen­t.
The Woodlands aims to become a key cog in Houston’s cancer-fighting machine with more than 80 acres of future biotech developmen­t.
 ?? Albert Vecerka/Alexandria Real Estate Equities ?? Alexandria Real Estate Equities is opening a life sciences research hub that will be home to biotech firms, including San Francisco-based Nurix.
Albert Vecerka/Alexandria Real Estate Equities Alexandria Real Estate Equities is opening a life sciences research hub that will be home to biotech firms, including San Francisco-based Nurix.

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