Fort Detrick begins bio-defense additions.

AuthorPappalardo, Joe
PositionSecurity beat: homeland defense briefs

The first step in creating a national bio-defense "campus" for civilian and military researchers is underway at Fort Detrick, Md.

The National institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), which is part of the National Institutes of Health, has been cleared to construct a $105 million laboratory that will include the first advanced scanning devices in bio-safety level 3 and 4 facilities.

The lab will have a clinical focus on emerging or engineered diseases, using Computed Tomography scans and Magnetic Resonance Imaging to produce research that will be published in medical literature, according to Mary Wright, chief of bio-defense for the clinical branch of NIAID. The goal is to use modern medicine to develop research bio-weapon candidates.

"These buildings take three or four years to build, because of the complexities," she said.

Construction of the National Bio-Defense Analysis and Countermeasures Center, operated by the Department of Homeland Security, still is being reviewed for its environmental impact. Construction plans for that facility are likely to be drawn early next year.

With the addition of these two labs, Fort Detrick will become a centralized location for advanced bio-defense research. Already located at...

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