The research center "The Simulated Man" will provide state-of-the-art research facilities for around 140 scientists and serve as an interface between medicine and engineering. Completion for the joint new building of Charité and TU Berlin is planned for the end of 2024.
Another center for cutting-edge research in medicine is being built in Berlin. The new building, called "The Simulated Man" (Si-M), will provide space for around 140 researchers from science and clinical practice to carry out their scientific work when it is scheduled for completion at the end of 2024. The name of the building also indicates the research focus: Interdisciplinary teams will further develop research into physiological and pathological mechanisms specifically on human cells, organ models and also on humans themselves.
What is special about Si-M is that the future teams will come from both Technische Universität Berlin and Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin. Both institutions will jointly manage the research center. "There will be no separate premises for exclusively TU Berlin or Charité, so the scientists will work in mixed laboratories and offices on joint projects without separation," says Shirin Kadler, scientific coordinator at Si-M. "Real interdisciplinary work will thus be possible at Si-M."
The application to build Si-M was submitted jointly almost five years ago by Prof. Roland Lauster, head of the Medical Biotechnology Department at TU Berlin, and Prof. Andreas Thiel, head of the Regenerative Immunology and Aging Group at Charité and the Berlin Institute of Health. After the Science Council recommended the construction of Si-M in Berlin in April 2018 and the architectural firm HDR won the tender a year later, ground was broken at the end of 2020.
Since then, construction has been underway on the five-story building on Seestraße in Berlin-Wedding, in the neighborhood of Charité's Virchow Clinic campus. The estimated costs of 34 million euros are being covered proportionately by the federal government and the state of Berlin as part of the program for research buildings at universities.
Of the approximately 3,770 square meters of floor space, two-thirds is available for the three laboratory levels - 'Subcellular', 'Cellular', 'Tissue'. "Here, researchers from a wide range of disciplines at Charité and TU Berlin come into direct contact with each other," explains Andreas Thiel, "In this way, borders between different scientific cultures are already being overcome in the Si-M research space."
In this way, possible new technologies such as 3D cultivation, multi-organ chips, 3D bioprinting and new multidimensional analyses of cells from blood or even in tissue samples are to be brought into medically usable processes and applications. Berlin, with Charité and TU Berlin as the driving forces, is a pioneer in this field.
According to Jennifer Rosowski, a Charité employee and scientific coordinator who is also part of the Si-M planning team, about one-third of the workstations will be occupied by permanent groups. "These working groups are leaders in their fields and provide significant support to other Si-M working groups in applying the key technologies mentioned above in-house," Rosowski says. The remaining two-thirds are assigned on a temporary basis. "These projects, funded through acquired third-party funds, already represent the core of the Si-M's research programmatic. It is part of the Si-M's research programmatic to thus give young scientists in particular the opportunity to freely implement their research projects," Rosowski says.
Even before the first employees move into Si-M, cooperative work is being done on the many studies and projects. For example, studies during the Corona epidemic investigated why COVID-19 can develop into a life-threatening disease in some sufferers and not in many.
Following an initial online networking event in November 2022, Si-M Day, the first "Si-M-posium" will now take place on September 1 at Amplifier Berlin, with support from Berlin Partner and others. Among the invited speakers are scientists from renowned institutions such as the Erasmus MC in Rotterdam (Miao-Ping Chien), the Roche Institute for Human Biology in Basel (Nikolche Gjorevski) and King's College London (Joana Neves) on the program.
The Si-M will also be available to the public. "In addition to the three laboratory floors mentioned, the future building will have two floors open to the public," says Kadler. Guests could work here as guest scientists, for example, and test subjects will be able to participate in studies here. There will be information events on socially relevant topics, as well as art and cultural events. The public is invited to engage with scientists and vice versa. Spontaneous visits to the Si-M are also possible and will be made attractive - so that the public can always find out what research is currently being carried out at the Si-M.
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Source: Publication "In Portrait | The Research Center "The Simulated Man" (Si-M)" HealthCapital Berlin-Brandenburg, 24.08.2023