Jump to navigation

The University of Arizona Wordmark Line Logo White
Resources
  • Campus Map
  • UAccess
  • A-Z
  • Directory / Phonebook
  • UA Future
  • Weather
  • News
  • Calendar

Search form

University of Arizona News | Home
Submit a Story Idea
Subscribe
  • Stories
    • All Stories
    • Arts
    • Business & Law
    • Campus
    • Health
    • Sci | Tech
    • Social Sciences
    • Sports
    • Students
  • Videos
  • Galleries
  • In the News
  • Calendar
  • UA@Work
  • For Journalists
    • Media Information
    • News Releases
    • Experts
    • Electronic Press Kits
  • Contact Us

Topping-Off Ceremony

Nov. 28, 2017
The Health Sciences Innovation Building is scheduled for completion in summer 2018.
UA President Robert C. Robbins signs the final steel beam.
Leigh A. Neumayer, interim senior vice president for health sciences, adds her signature to the steel beam.
Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix, signs the steel beam.
Five attendees stand next to a white steel beam decorated with signatures. From left: Gregg Goldman, UA senior vice president for business affairs and chief financial officer; Aundrea DeGravina and Vianney Careaga, student members of the Arizona Board of
The final steel beam is lifted into place.
Attendees look up as the beam rises to the top of the building.
Robbins addresses the audience.
From left: Charles B. Cairns, dean of the College of Medicine – Tucson; Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix; Rick G. Schnellmann, dean of the College of Pharmacy; Iman Hakim, dean of the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health.
Neumayer takes a photo of Robbins wearing a cowboy hat he borrowed to shield his eyes from the sun.
An artistic rendering of the interior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
An artistic rendering of the exterior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
The Health Sciences Innovation Building is scheduled for completion in summer 2018.
The Health Sciences Innovation Building is scheduled for completion in summer 2018.
1 of 12
UA President Robert C. Robbins signs the final steel beam.
UA President Robert C. Robbins signs the final steel beam.
2 of 12
Leigh A. Neumayer, interim senior vice president for health sciences, adds her signature to the steel beam.
Leigh A. Neumayer, interim senior vice president for health sciences, adds her signature to the steel beam.
3 of 12
Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix, signs the steel beam.
Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix, signs the steel beam.
4 of 12
Five attendees stand next to a white steel beam decorated with signatures. From left: Gregg Goldman, UA senior vice president for business affairs and chief financial officer; Aundrea DeGravina and Vianney Careaga, student members of the Arizona Board of
Five attendees stand next to a white steel beam decorated with signatures. From left: Gregg Goldman, UA senior vice president for business affairs and chief financial officer; Aundrea DeGravina and Vianney Careaga, student members of the Arizona Board of Regents; Richard H. Silverman, vice chair of the UA Foundation board of trustees and of counsel at Jennings, Strouss & Salmon PLC; and Lyndel Manson, regent.
5 of 12
The final steel beam is lifted into place.
The final steel beam is lifted into place.
6 of 12
Attendees look up as the beam rises to the top of the building.
Attendees look up as the beam rises to the top of the building.
7 of 12
Robbins addresses the audience.
Robbins addresses the audience.
8 of 12
From left: Charles B. Cairns, dean of the College of Medicine – Tucson; Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix; Rick G. Schnellmann, dean of the College of Pharmacy; Iman Hakim, dean of the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health.
From left: Charles B. Cairns, dean of the College of Medicine – Tucson; Guy Reed, dean of the College of Medicine – Phoenix; Rick G. Schnellmann, dean of the College of Pharmacy; Iman Hakim, dean of the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health.
9 of 12
Neumayer takes a photo of Robbins wearing a cowboy hat he borrowed to shield his eyes from the sun.
Neumayer takes a photo of Robbins wearing a cowboy hat he borrowed to shield his eyes from the sun.
10 of 12
An artistic rendering of the interior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
An artistic rendering of the interior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
11 of 12
An artistic rendering of the exterior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
An artistic rendering of the exterior of the Health Sciences Innovation Building.
12 of 12
Previous Next

The last steel beam in the construction of the new University of Arizona Health Sciences Innovation Building has been hoisted into place.

Covered with signatures and bedecked with U.S. and Arizona flags and a small ceremonial tree, the beam rose above the crowd that had gathered for the Nov. 17 "topping-off" ceremony, which was presided over by UA President Robert C. Robbins, Provost Andrew C. Comrie, and Leigh A. Neumayer, interim senior vice president for health sciences.

"This building represents an incredible opportunity," Robbins said. "It's a big part of what we're doing here at the university … around active learning and collaborative learning."

"That's the future, and I think that that's going to be the key to improving our retention rate, our graduation rate and providing our students with the tools necessary to go out and compete and work effectively in a team-oriented approach, certainly around the health sciences but around all of industry," he said.

Attendees were invited to sign the steel beam before it was placed, a milestone in the construction of the $165 million, nine-story, 220,000-square-foot building at North Cherry Avenue and East Drachman Street on the UAHS campus. Construction began in June 1016.

Scheduled for completion next summer, the Health Sciences Innovation Building is designed for interprofessional, team-based health professions education. The futuristic facility will include flexible group/team learning areas and an innovative medical simulation center that will serve to foster collaboration among multidisciplinary teams of health professionals, students and faculty in the UA colleges of medicine, nursing, pharmacy and public health.

"To take a page from one of Dr. Robbins' favorite books … 'The Fourth Industrial Revolution,' this building represents our collective efforts to put humans first and empower technology to give us all a better quality of life through improved health, positioning us at the intersection of the physical, digital and biological realms," Neumayer said. "It's an example of the continued collaboration of various stakeholders within health sciences, across the campus, at Banner Health, and through the community and the state, to ensure that the UA remains on the leading edge of innovative medical education."

The building was designed to provide a single, interdisciplinary simulation facility where students from all of the UAHS colleges can learn and practice as teams from the start of their health care training. Some of its features include:

  • "Flipped classrooms" that can accommodate as many as 150 students for interactive learning.
  • A "special events forum" that can accommodate more than 1,000 people.
  • Clinical labs and simulation centers.

To learn more about the Health Sciences Innovation Building, click here. To see artistic renderings of how the building will look once completed, click here.

Share

SUBSCRIBE

Get the latest UArizona News delivered to your inbox. Or, stay in the loop using our Amazon Alexa skill.

Subscribe Get Alexa Alerts

University of Arizona News | Home
  • Employment
  • Emergency Information
  • Title IX
  • UAlert
  • Information Security & Privacy
  • Copyright
  • Campus Accessibility
  • Contact Us
  • Feedback

We respectfully acknowledge the University of Arizona is on the land and territories of Indigenous peoples. Today, Arizona is home to 22 federally recognized tribes, with Tucson being home to the O’odham and the Yaqui. Committed to diversity and inclusion, the University strives to build sustainable relationships with sovereign Native Nations and Indigenous communities through education offerings, partnerships, and community service.


University Information Security and Privacy

© 2023 The Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of The University of Arizona.