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SDSU Breaks Ground on Coastal Waters
Laboratory
Researchers Aim for Facility to
Become Premier Water Quality Lab in Southern California
Jennifer Zwiebel
SDSU Marketing & Communications
(619) 594-4298
jzwiebel@mail.sdsu.edu
SAN DIEGO, Tuesday, August 24, 2004 – Today San Diego State University, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) and the San Diego
Metropolitan Wastewater Department (MWWD) celebrated breaking ground
on an $8 million water quality research and analysis facility that
SDSU researchers hope to develop into Southern California’s
main research hub for studying the health of the coastal marine
ecosystem.
“When people think
of San Diego, they picture its beautiful coastline, its great swimming
beaches, and the San Diego Bay. But what they may not realize is
that San Diego's coastal waters are increasingly threatened by pollution
from urban runoff and other developmental pressures which can degrade
beach water quality and diminish marine biodiversity,” says
Rick Gersberg, director of the SDSU Coastal and Marine Institute.
“With this lab, we'll be much more closely linked to the coastal
problems we're trying to solve and more able to focus on how to
preserve our invaluable coastal zone resources.”
The Coastal Waters Laboratory,
a 40,000 square foot two-story building located on a site at the
former Naval Training Center with access to San Diego Bay, will
feature a research facilities and offices, an 11,500-square-foot
outdoor marine biology aquarium and seawater system, plus facilities
for divers and docks for SDSU’s research boats. The schedule
for completion is spring 2005.
Brian Hentschel, SDSU Assistant
Professor and Marine Invertebrate Ecologist in the Biology Department
can’t wait to have access to the seawater system. “The
seawater and aquarium facilities are a critical component of the
new building, complementing our campus labs and allowing our research
programs to grow. We believe the expansion of our marine facilities
will make San Diego State University one of the premier marine biology
programs in California,” said Hentschel.
The Coastal Waters Laboratory
is a product of many levels of collaboration that will continue
after the complex is built. MWWD worked with the San Diego State
University Foundation to facilitate development on land provided
by the City of San Diego with the closure of the former Naval Training
Center. In addition, SDSU and the USGS’s Water Resources Division
will share space in the building and work on joint projects. The
Coastal Waters Laboratory also is being built next to MWWD’s
Environmental Monitoring and Technical Services Laboratory, which
will enhance information exchange among the different organizations
on water-related initiatives.
"The new Coastal Waters
Laboratory is a model for partnership," U.S. Geological Survey
Director Chip Groat said. "It will be a state-of-the-art facility
that will greatly benefit the faculty and students of San Diego
State University, the scientists and partners of USGS and the San
Diego Metropolitan Wastewater Department. I believe that this is
the right laboratory in the right place at the right time, and I
commend the SDSU Foundation for the vital role they have played."
Gersberg, a professor of
environmental health in SDSU’s Graduate School of Public Health
and a member of the San Diego Mayor’s Clean Water Task Force,
said the Coastal Waters Laboratory will be one of the first in California
to look not only at water quality issues on the coast, but also
explore inland sources of marine pollution that may originate in
these watersheds far from the coast, but still can degrade coastal
recreation and marine diversity. “To have the city, USGS and
the university working together to form a “coastal-zone campus”
focused on these coastal zone issues right here in the region makes
eminent sense,” he said.
SDSU’s Coastal &
Marine Institute, established in the early 1990s from its predecessor,
the Center for Marine Studies, has a multifaceted mission: to study
processes that affect the coastal and marine environment; to educate
students and the public; and to provide advice on the wise use and
management of natural resources. It also coordinates the Oceanography
and Marine Studies degree programs at San Diego State University.
The Coastal Waters Laboratory
will be the latest off-campus research facility affiliated with
the Institute, joining the Pacific Estuarine Research Laboratory,
which has operations at the Tijuana River National Estuarine Research
Reserve near the international border; and the Center for Inland
Waters at the Salton Sea.
SDSU’s researchers
will use the facility to help them look at bacteria and viruses
in coastal waters and evaluate their risk to human health during
swimming and surfing; analyze chemical pollution, such as from pesticides
and metals, and their risk to wildlife, as well as monitor the health
and function and diversity of the ecosystem – an effort that
will be greatly facilitated by the new seawater system to be built
at the new lab.
The Coastal Waters Laboratory
will also serve as a home base for boats used in SDSU’s diving
instruction courses and marine biology research, and as a specimen
collection facility to store and examine marine life organisms and
specimens.
Pacific Cornerstone Architects designed the Coastal Waters Laboratory;
the general contractor is Ledcor Petty Construction. The project
is being financed with non-state tax exempt bonds.
SDSU is designated a "Doctoral/Research
University-Intensive" by the Carnegie Foundation, placing it
among the top 6.7 percent of higher education institutions in the
U.S. SDSU faculty, with support from the SDSU Foundation, have received
a total of more than a half-billion dollars in external funding
through research grants and contracts in the last four years.
San Diego State University
is the oldest and largest higher education institution in the San
Diego region. Since it was founded in 1897, the university has grown
to offer bachelor’s degrees in 81 areas, master’s degrees
in 72 areas and doctorates in 14 areas. SDSU’s more than 33,000
students participate in academic curriculum distinguished by direct
contact with faculty and an increasing international emphasis that
prepares them for a global future. For more information, visit www.sdsu.edu.
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