Posts Tagged ‘University of Arizona’

Funding for Downtown Cancer Center To Be Approved

Tuesday, May 17th, 2011

biomed_campusAZCentral is reporting that the City of Phoenix has come to an agreement to build an outpatient clinical cancer center near Fillmore and Seventh Street on the Phoenix Biomedical Campus.  The City Council is expected to approve $14 million to initiate the process at the May 18 council meeting.  The 250,000-square-foot facility could begin construction by the end of 2012 and upon completion would be able to handle 200,000 patient visits a year.  The remainder of the $135 million cost will be funded through private donations to be raised by the University of Arizona Foundation.

The cancer center will join the Health Sciences Education Building currently under construction, with TGEN/IGC and the U of A College of Medicine – Phoenix already in place.  For more information on the burgeoning Phoenix Biomedical Campus and plans for the new cancer center please visit:  Phoenix, UA Reach Deal for $135 Million Downtown Cancer Center

Construction Begins On Health Sciences Education Building

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

On Wednesday dignitaries from around the state commemorated the groundbreaking of the Health Sciences Education Building to be located north of the northwest corner of 7th Street and Van Buren. Governor Jan Brewer, President Ernest Calderon of the Arizona Board of Regents, and Phoenix Mayor Phil Gordon gave statements lauding the cooperation necessary to begin construction and forecasting the social and economic benefits the building will provide.

GroundBreakingThe 268,000-square-foot facility will be built in accordance with LEED standards, house classroom and lecture space, and allow the UofA College of Medicine in Phoenix to expand its class size to 110 students.  Currently there are 48 students per class.

This unique endeavor will feature cooperation between University of Arizona and Northern Arizona University and will educate students in a variety of medical fields. The building will be constructed by Sundt and DPR construction, who sponsored the groundbreaking ceremony.  Officials predict the project will provide 5,000 construction jobs and the fully built Biomedical Campus could have a future economic impact in excess of $2 billion a year by 2025. This latest building on the Phoenix Biomedical Campus is expected to open in 2012. For more information, please visit: A booster shot for ailing Arizona.

Forecasting the Suns

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The addition of Channing Frye is just one reason the Suns are looking to return to the playoffs.

As I write this post the Phoenix Suns have just dropped their first game of the year, 122-100 at defending Eastern Conference champion Orlando. Despite last night’s lopsided road loss to a quality opponent, there are numerous reasons to believe that these Suns (4-1) are not only more entertaining than last year’s 46-win version, but far better equipped to compete for a mid-range playoff seed in the highly competitive Western Conference.

*University of Arizona product Channing Frye gives the team a low-post shot-blocker who can run the floor and shoot threes (he’s made an astonishing 15-of-22 from behind the arc to lead the team in both attempts and makes).

*Goran Dragic appears capable of providing 15-20 solid minutes a game at point guard in relief of Steve Nash. Last season, the team couldn’t afford to let Nash and his perpetually bad back rest for any extended minutes and the All-Star point guard’s fourth-quarter performance suffered.

*The Suns’ best offseason addition was one by subtraction. Dealing Shaquille O’Neal to Cleveland rid the team of some star appeal, sure, but it also allowed the Suns to return to their run-and-gun roots. With O’Neal clogging up the middle, the Suns’ offense sputtered without the benefit of improved defense, which was why President of Basketball Operations and General Manager Steve Kerr sent Shawn Marion to Miami in exchange for O’Neal in the first place. I miss Shaq’s goofball antics and clever sound bites, but I don’t miss his inability to guard a pick-and-roll.

*Amare Stoudemire wants to get paid. It’s no secret that the Suns’ star forward wants a contract extension, and the Suns played their cards with the precision of poker star Phil Ivey in making Stoudemire prove his worth, attitude and commitment before rewarding him.

*Alvin Gentry isn’t Mike D’Antoni, and that’s not a bad thing. Advanced as D’Antoni’s offensive schemes were, he was incurably stubborn when it came to extending his bench. Whereas D’Antoni routinely played 6-7 players the entire game, Gentry has 7 guys averaging 20-plus minutes a game with Louis Amundson playing 18, Dragic getting 15, and rookie Earl Clark’s minutes expected to grow as the season progresses. And Gentry deserves credit for extending the bench without sacrificing offense. The Suns are still averaging 111 points per game, which is second only to Denver and six points better than D’Antoni’s Knicks.

Although it’s only early November, it’s safe to say we’ll know more about the strength and character of this team once it completes this brutal East Coast road trip (which includes dates at Boston, Washington and Philadelphia) and returns to US Airways Center Nov. 11 to play New Orleans. It’s not delusional to project that the Suns will carry a 7-2 record, not to mention a pronounced swagger, into Los Angeles on Nov. 12 to take on the arch-nemesis Lakers.

By then, you can bet that Downtown Phoenix will have taken on a noticeable orange tint.