Groundbreaking for New USDA Poultry
Facility
By Sharon Durham September 9, 2005
WASHINGTON, Sept. 9A groundbreaking ceremony was held
today for a new, $5.2 million facility for state-of-the-art research on
chickens and poultry at the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's Henry A. Wallace Beltsville (Md.) Agricultural Research
Center (BARC).
"This facility will provide much-needed space and allow our scientists
to conduct research on poultry nutrition, growth regulation and reproduction,"
said Edward B. Knipling, administrator of USDA's Agricultural Research Service
(ARS).
The 28,100-square-foot building is designed primarily to house
chickens and turkeys for poultry research conducted by BARC's
Growth
Biology Laboratory and
Biotechnology
and Germplasm Laboratory. The two labs currently share space in a building
constructed in the 1930s. Poultry are now housed in other buildings on the
grounds, which is operated by ARS, USDA's chief in-house scientific research
agency.
Scheduled to open in May 2006, the new facility will have a "U"-shaped
configuration. One wing will house turkeys, while the other wing will house
chickens. A hatchery, labs and feed rooms will be located at the base of the
"U". The new facility will also include a shower and disinfection area and
other facilities for employees who work in the labs.