Berkeley Lab Chooses Richmond For 2nd Campus


Courtesy Berkeleyside
Design for the Richmond Field Station Lab campus
The Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory has selected Richmond as the site for its second campus. The Lab annnounced the news this morning on its website, saying the University of California-owned Richmond Field Station site “presents the best opportunity to solve the Lab’s pressing space problems while allowing for long term growth and maintaining the 80-year tradition of close cooperation with the UC Berkeley Campus.”

Three Berkeley-connected sites were on a shortlist of six for the campus. They were: Berkeley Aquatic Park West, located in West Berkeley; Emeryville/Berkeley, (which included properties currently occupied by the Lab in Emeryville and West Berkeley); and Golden Gate Fields, spanning the cities of Berkeley and Albany.

The Lab had originally said it would announce its decision in November 2011, but revised that to “early in 2012″ in late November, saying it needed more time to fully evaluate its options.

“Each city, community, and their developer partners presented extremely thoughtful and well-formulated proposals for us to consider, for which we are deeply grateful,” Berkeley Lab Director’s Paul Alivisatos said in the release. “The communities of Albany, Alameda, Berkeley, Emeryville, Oakland and Richmond have been true partners in this process. While we can only pick one site, we hope that the new relationships we’ve made will continue to help us foster excitement in science. The enthusiasm is wonderful affirmation of the desire of the entire East Bay to be part of developing scientific solutions to some of the greatest challenges facing our society.”

Russ Mitchell
Russ Mitchell
wrote on 01/24/2012 at 6:39 a.m. PST

LBNL has spent decades defending itself against anti-growth forces in Berkeley. Why would anyone in Berkeley have thought such a conservative, clueless-about-business town would stand a chance?

Jay Shaw
Jay Shaw
wrote on 01/24/2012 at 1:08 p.m. PST

That's one of the points Russ, Lawrence Labs is less about business and more about science as it should be. The holy grail of business loose with unfettered mindless expansion is over-rated in America and un-balanced.

When people love the support, they call it management, when they hate the opposition they call it anti-growth. It's neither.

Sounds like you hate Berkeley. What would you advise?

Russ Mitchell
Russ Mitchell
wrote on 01/26/2012 at 4:13 p.m. PST

I don't hate Berkeley. But why do all the high-tech businesses, some of them spun off from the Labs, set up in Emeryville and elsewhere? Because Berkeley government is anti-business, and, effectively though they'd never admit it, anti-jobs.

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