A crowd of more than
1,000 people from the campus, community and local corporations
were on hand this morning when UCSD dedicated its high-tech research
home for the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information
Technology (Calit2), and unveiled a $1.5 million gift to the institute
from QUALCOMM Incorporated.
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| The new Calit2 building at UCSD will be called Atkinson Hall, named former UCSD Chancellor and UC President Richard C. Atkinson |
During
the formal ceremony, university officials jointly disclosed
the creation of a new academic chair in wireless communications
funded through Calit2 by industry partner Ericsson. They also
announced that the 215,000-square-foot building will be named
Atkinson Hall in honor of former UC President Richard C. Atkinson,
who played a vital role in the launch of Calit2 five years
ago.
Calit2 is a partnership
of UCSD and UC Irvine, and opened its building in Irvine last
November. At peak capacity, the Calit2 building in La Jolla
will house 900 researchers and staff, most of them working
on projects led by faculty from more than 20 campus departments.
With its focus on discovery and innovation at the intersection
of science, engineering and the arts, Calit2 constitutes one
of the largest multidisciplinary research centers in the nation.
“Our research
mission is a public trust that we fulfill best by collaborating
across disciplines and sectors,” said UCSD Chancellor
Marye Anne Fox. “Perhaps more than any other academic
endeavor, Calit2 boldly exemplifies UCSD's three pillars of
strength: innovation, interdisciplinary scholarship, and international
collaboration.”
Most affiliated faculty
will retain their offices in their home departments, but are
relocating projects and personnel into Calit2’s labs
and ‘research neighborhoods’. More than two-thirds
of the building’s occupants will be graduate student
researchers, with bioengineers working alongside computer
scientists, visual artists next door to neuroscientists, electrical
engineers down the hall from cognitive scientists, and so
on.
“This new building
is a physical manifestation of our multidisciplinary agenda,”
said Ramesh Rao, Director of Calit2’s UCSD Division.
“We have invested heavily in creating shared facilities,
including clean rooms for nanofabrication, digital theaters
for new media arts and scientific visualization, test and
measurement labs for circuit design, smart spaces for experiments
in augmented reality, testbeds for wireless and optical communications,
and much more.”
QUALCOMM Chief Executive
Officer, Dr. Paul E. Jacobs, announced the company’s
$1.5 million gift. It comes on top of $15 million already
donated by the San Diego-based wireless communications company
in support of research and education activities carried out
by the institute’s UCSD Division. According to Calit2’s
Rao, the gift is earmarked for an innovation fund to help
initiate and sustain new research activities through support
for faculty, students and technical staff.
Funding for the Calit2
buildings at UCSD and UC Irvine came from California taxpayers
as part of the state’s $100 million startup investment
in the institute. (The state invested similar investments
in three other UC-based California Institutes for Science
and Innovation.) The capital investment from the state was
conditioned on Calit2 raising at least twice as much from
other sources. Since its launch in December 2000, faculty
affiliated with the UCSD Division of Calit2 have received
more than $226 million in federal research awards, and industry
donations as well as research affiliated with industry total
approximately $78 million to date.
Jacobs School of
Engineering Dean Frieder Seible – co-chair of Calit2’s
Governing Board – added that industry plays a crucial
role in commercializing innovations that come out of Calit2
labs at UCSD. “As we create these new technologies,”
noted Seible, “we look to our industry partners to develop
and execute the ideas that will add the most value to society.”
In her remarks, UCSD
Chancellor Fox announced that the new building at UCSD will
carry the name of one of her predecessors as chancellor. Richard
Atkinson was Director of the National Science Foundation before
becoming UCSD Chancellor in 1980. His 15-year tenure and bold
leadership at UCSD enhanced the campus’s stature as
one of the world’s leading research universities. Before
retiring in 2003, the internationally respected scholar and
scientist served for eight years as President of the UC system.
During that time, he was a strong proponent of the new institutes
to be located on UC campuses.
“Dick had the
vision to develop and create Calit2 and its sister institutes
as an institutional innovation across the entire UC system,
so it is fitting that the San Diego campus Calit2 building
will be named in his honor,” said Fox. “We are
also honoring his service to UCSD and the UC system, and for
his very distinguished, 47-year career in teaching, research
and public service.”
Calit2’s Rao
used his remarks to announce creation of the Ericsson Endowed
Chair in Wireless Communications Access Techniques, and the
naming of its first holder, Electrical and Computer Engineering
professor Laurence Milstein. The chair is one of several pledged
by Ericsson as part of its initial commitment to Calit2.
Milstein joined the
UCSD faculty in 1976, and is a former department chair. The
IEEE Fellow is an expert in digital communications theory
and wireless communications. He has specialized in spread-spectrum
systems, while also working in fields ranging from signal
transmission to broadband and ultra wideband wireless. Prior
to joining UCSD, Milstein was a professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in New York, and a researcher in satellite communications
at Hughes Aircraft Co. He earned his Ph.D. in 1968 from the
Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn.
Filling UCSD’s
new Engineering Courtyard to capacity for the dedication ceremony,
attendees used their cell phones to ‘dial the future’
and formally open the institute’s doors as part of a
multimedia, interactive performance. Inside the six-story
structure, visitors were treated to 150 research exhibits
and tours of the 21st-century facilities, including labs devoted
to research on advanced integrated circuits, wireless and
optical networking, and even smart spaces for experiments
in augmented reality.
Other speakers at
the dedication ceremony included UC President Robert C. Dynes,
and Michael Drake, Chancellor of UC Irvine.
Calit2 is the first
of California’s four new state-funded research institutes
to complete its facilities. “This was an immense feat
that required unprecedented cooperation among the campuses,
community and industry partners, and both divisions of Calit2,”
said Calit2 Director Larry Smarr. “With the structures
now built, we can focus all of our energies on developing
what is already a world-class research center and delivering
on Calit2’s promise to harness information technology
and telecommunications to benefit society and improve the
competitiveness of the California economy.”
The festivities surrounding
the dedication of the Calit2 building at UCSD were set to
continue into the evening with an art-related reception at
5:00PM, a computer-music concert at 7:00 PM, and an interactive
multimedia performance set 25 years in the future starting
at 8:00PM. Attendees were asked to dress for Halloween in
2030.Called SPECFLIC 1.0, the ‘speculative distributed
cinema’ piece developed by Visual Arts professor Adriene
Jenik incorporates wireless devices, audience participation,
and projection of video and images on surfaces of the new
building. The evening activities are hosted by UCSD’s
Center for Research in Computing & the Arts, which is
now based in Atkinson Hall and is part of Calit2’s new-media
arts activities.