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brown building with greenery in front

Board of Trustees approves first designs, renderings for new School of Medicine building

The University of South Carolina is making necessary investments to its physical campus to ensure a world-class academic experience with one of those key pieces being a new School of Medicine Columbia and research building planned for the BullStreet district.

The university released its first official renderings Tuesday (Dec. 19) of the state-of-the art building designed to anchor future health research.

USC’s Board of Trustees approved the design of the new School of Medicine Columbia building and reviewed new renderings of the outside of the building.

Construction on the project is slated to begin in 2025 and is expected to be complete by 2027.

  • brown building with greenery in front of it
  • wide shot of brown building with greenery in front
  • wide shot of brown building with trees in front
  • courtyard surrounded by brown buildings

The 300,000-square-foot building will be the heart of the new $300 million campus and will feature innovative active-learning classrooms, extensive medical simulation spaces, a health science library, numerous labs for interdisciplinary research and a cafe.

There are also plans — reflected in the renderings — for an outdoor courtyard and garden areas.

Plans include a health sciences campus consisting of up to four additional buildings on the 16-acre site surrounding the inaugural building.

The health sciences campus is expected to transform health research and health care delivery in South Carolina while providing trailblazing clinical and research spaces dedicated to finding solutions to diverse health challenges in the state.

USC is partnering with Gilbane, which will lead the planning, design, development and construction. Other key partners include: lead design architect The SLAM Collaborative (Atlanta and Glastonbury, Connecticut), Columbia-based architect BOUDREAUX, operations Manager Honeywell (Wabash, Indiana) and minority-owned business Brownstone Design and Construction Group out of Columbia. Restoration 52 — a development consultant and minority- and women-owned business based in Greenville — is also helping throughout the process.

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