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The Daniel L. Malone Engineering Center is one of two new buildings on
Yale’s central campus that is devoted to science.
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New buildings reflect commitment to sciences
The dedication of two new buildings on the main campus in October highlighted
the university’s commitment to scientific research and education.
The Department of Biomedical Engineering got a new home in the Daniel
L. Malone Engineering Center, a five-story, 63,117-square-foot building
on Prospect Street. Research there will focus on biomedical engineering,
materials science and nanotechnology. The construction was made possible
by a $24 million gift from John C. Malone, a 1963 Yale College alumnus
and chair of the Liberty Media Corp., and is named for his father, an
engineer at General Electric.

“It stands as a statement to all that Yale engineering is an integral
part of this university’s most vibrant intellectual life,”
said Paul A. Fleury, Ph.D., dean of the Faculty of Engineering. “The
research and teaching that will take place here will center upon those
forefront areas of biomedical engineering, materials science and nanotechnology
that underpin 21st-century progress.”

Also on Prospect Street is the 105,000-square-foot, three-story Class
of 1954 Chemistry Research Building, the result of the largest class gift
in the university’s history. Each floor is dedicated to one of three
areas: synthetic organic chemistry, inorganic chemistry and chemical biology.
Projects under way include developing new materials for solar energy and
new catalysts to facilitate hydrogen storage as a fuel source, and investigating
the molecular basis for energy transduction in plant photosynthesis.

Provost Andrew D. Hamilton, Ph.D., said a collaboration among the administration,
the faculty and the Class of 1954 made the building possible. At the dedication
Hamilton had a representative of each group help create a chemical reaction
in which three clear liquids were mixed together before the solution turned
to Yale blue. “It only works when all three components of the reaction
are present,” Hamilton said. “Cooperation is vital for continued
Yale success, as this reaction continues again and again and again.”

—John Curtis
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