SALK INSTITUTE FOR BIOLOGICAL STUDIES
The 'Salk Institute for Biological Studies' is an independent, non-profit, scientific research laboratory located in La Jolla, California. It was founded in 1960 by Jonas Salk, M.D., the developer of the polio vaccine. Among the founding consultants were Jacob Bronowski and Francis Crick.
The institute has 56 labs and focuses its research in three areas: Molecular Biology and Genetics; Neurosciences; and Plant Biology. Research topics include cancer, diabetes, birth defects, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, AIDS, and American Sign Language.
The March of Dimes provided the initial funding and continues to support the institute. The campus was designed by Louis Kahn. Salk had sought to make a beautiful campus in order to draw the best researchers in the world.
The original buildings of the Salk Institute were designated as a historical landmark in 1991. The entire 27-acre site was deemed eligible by the California Historical Resources Commission in 2006 for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
The World Monuments Fund has listed the Salk Institute on its 2008 Watch List of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in the world. A proposed Master Plan would add over 240,000 square feet, most on the western side overlooking the ocean, and subdivide the property into four parcels.
The institute currently employs more than 1200 researchers and staff.
Salk and Kahn approached the city of San Diego in March 1960 about a gift of land on the Torrey Pines Mesa and were granted their request after a referendum in June 1960. Construction began in 1962 and a handful of researchers moved into the first laboratory in 1963. Additional buildings housing more laboratories as well as the organizational administrative offices were constructed in the 1990s, designed by Anshen & Allen.
The Institute is seeking approvals from the City of San Diego for a controversial expansion over the next 40 - 50 years that includes a fitness facility, daycare center and residences on the southwest part of the campus, a four-story building on the northwest, and a 92,000 square foot building at the front.
Jonas Salk died in 1995. A memorial lies at the entrance to the Institute: "Hope lies in dreams, in imagination and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality."
Richard Murphy, PhD was president until 1 July 2007. Irwin M. Jacobs is Chairman of the Board of Directors.
The institute has 3 living Nobel laureates on its active faculty: Sydney Brenner, Renato Dulbecco and Roger Guillemin.
★ Tony Hunter
★ Francis Crick
★ Bart Sefton
★ Ronald M. Evans
★ Marguerite Vogt
★ Dr. Ursula Bellugi, founder of the neurobiology of American Sign Language
★ Salk Institute for Biological Studies
★ Photos of Salk Institute
★ CNN: Study reverses male infertility in mice
★ San Diego Consortium for Regenerative Medicine news release
★ Salk Institute Cancer Center at www.cancer.gov
The institute has 56 labs and focuses its research in three areas: Molecular Biology and Genetics; Neurosciences; and Plant Biology. Research topics include cancer, diabetes, birth defects, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, AIDS, and American Sign Language.
The March of Dimes provided the initial funding and continues to support the institute. The campus was designed by Louis Kahn. Salk had sought to make a beautiful campus in order to draw the best researchers in the world.
The original buildings of the Salk Institute were designated as a historical landmark in 1991. The entire 27-acre site was deemed eligible by the California Historical Resources Commission in 2006 for listing on the National Register of Historic Places.
The World Monuments Fund has listed the Salk Institute on its 2008 Watch List of the 100 Most Endangered Sites in the world. A proposed Master Plan would add over 240,000 square feet, most on the western side overlooking the ocean, and subdivide the property into four parcels.
The institute currently employs more than 1200 researchers and staff.
| Contents |
| History |
| Administration |
| Nobel Laureates |
| Famous employees |
| References |
| External links |
History
Salk and Kahn approached the city of San Diego in March 1960 about a gift of land on the Torrey Pines Mesa and were granted their request after a referendum in June 1960. Construction began in 1962 and a handful of researchers moved into the first laboratory in 1963. Additional buildings housing more laboratories as well as the organizational administrative offices were constructed in the 1990s, designed by Anshen & Allen.
The Institute is seeking approvals from the City of San Diego for a controversial expansion over the next 40 - 50 years that includes a fitness facility, daycare center and residences on the southwest part of the campus, a four-story building on the northwest, and a 92,000 square foot building at the front.
Jonas Salk died in 1995. A memorial lies at the entrance to the Institute: "Hope lies in dreams, in imagination and in the courage of those who dare to make dreams into reality."
Administration
Richard Murphy, PhD was president until 1 July 2007. Irwin M. Jacobs is Chairman of the Board of Directors.
Nobel Laureates
The institute has 3 living Nobel laureates on its active faculty: Sydney Brenner, Renato Dulbecco and Roger Guillemin.
Famous employees
★ Tony Hunter
★ Francis Crick
★ Bart Sefton
★ Ronald M. Evans
★ Marguerite Vogt
★ Dr. Ursula Bellugi, founder of the neurobiology of American Sign Language
References
★ Salk Institute for Biological Studies
External links
★ Photos of Salk Institute
★ CNN: Study reverses male infertility in mice
★ San Diego Consortium for Regenerative Medicine news release
★ Salk Institute Cancer Center at www.cancer.gov
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