Albuquerque Journal

Old parochial school to become bioscience lab

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA

Shovels could break ground early next year to turn the two-story parochial school attached to the old First Baptist Church Downtown into a modern bioscience lab for startup companies.

The University of New Mexico is finalizing a deal with California-based developer HatchSpace­s LLC to take over the project as part of the Innovate ABQ high-tech research and developmen­t zone at Broadway and Central, executives from HatchSpace­s told community leaders in an online forum Thursday.

“We’re close to being able to formally announce the kickoff of the project,” HatchSpace­s principal Howard Kozloff said. “There’s just some i’s still to dot and t’s to cross.”

UNM acquired the 7-acre Downtown property in 2014 to turn it into an innovative entreprene­urial hub in the heart of Albuquerqu­e. For years, conversion of the former parochial school was the next phase of developmen­t for the Innovate ABQ site, following the 2017 opening of UNM’s six-story Lobo Rainforest Building. But until last summer, site developmen­t was managed by a nonprofit entity that faced financial challenges and legal issues in building out the Innovate ABQ hub, encouragin­g UNM to re-take control of the project.

This year, HatchSpace­s approached UNM’s Lobo Developmen­t Corp., which manages the university’s real estate invest

ments, to discuss a partnershi­p agreement to put the company in the driver’s seat for the bioscience lab project, said Kelly Ward, Lobo Developmen­t Corp.’s business developmen­t director.

“That company has a great track record in California for this type of life-science-focused real estate developmen­t,” Ward told the Journal. “We were prepared to go it alone on the project, but then HatchSpace­s came to us.”

The company specialize­s in building research and developmen­t facilities for bioscience companies, making the Innovate ABQ project a good fit, Kozloff said. It plans to convert the 26,000-square-foot structure, which sits on the west side of the First Baptist Church Sanctuary and office tower, into wet labs and office space for startup companies looking to launch and grow in Albuquerqu­e.

The company hopes to break ground on the renovation in early 2022, after finalizing its partnershi­p with UNM and acquiring regulatory approvals, Kozloff said. The company envisions about nine months of constructi­on time.

The renovation investment will be shared between UNM and HatchSpace­s.

“We expect to finalize the partnershi­p deal in the next four weeks or so, and then HatchSpace­s will do some design work and determine the costs,” Ward said.

 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? The former parochial school at the old First Baptist Church building at Central and Broadway is part of the Innovate ABQ high-tech research and developmen­t zone.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL The former parochial school at the old First Baptist Church building at Central and Broadway is part of the Innovate ABQ high-tech research and developmen­t zone.

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