| 查看: 455 | 回复: 2 | |||
| 当前只显示满足指定条件的回帖,点击这里查看本话题的所有回帖 | |||
[交流]
As Pharma Jobs Leave N.J., Office Space Ghost Towns Remain 已有2人参与
|
|||
|
Tom Stanton of the real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle shows off empty lab space at Roche in Nutley, N.J. Daniel Tucker/WNYC roche-013ef156abac5f60e18756c3a4e0071c088c47be-s3-c85.jpg A Roche lab in 2009, a more bustling time. Mel Evans/AP New Jersey used to be known as "the nation's medicine chest," but over the past two decades, many of the state's pharmaceutical industry jobs have dried up or moved elsewhere, and left millions of square feet of office space, warehouses and laboratories sitting empty. One of those sites is the 116-acre corporate campus of the Swiss drugmaker Roche in Nutley, N.J. There are dozens of buildings on this campus, 10 miles west of midtown Manhattan. In fact, there are enough bio and chem labs, offices and auditoriums to fill up the entire Empire State Building. But since December, all of that space — 2 million square feet of it — has been vacant, the laboratories dark and the sidewalks deserted. "When this was a thriving site, this sidewalk would have been busy with folks walking up and down," says Darien Wilson, one of just 38 Roche employees still working at the site as the company tries to sell the property. "We had great amenities for people, like on-site child care. You had dinners to-go where you could order food by lunch and take it home with you if you were working late. We had dry cleaning," she says. Five years ago, Roche acquired Genentech, moved its management to San Francisco and started to slowly withdraw from New Jersey. That's a pretty typical story for what's been happening in the state. In the past 20 years, New Jersey went from having more than 20 percent of U.S. pharma manufacturing jobs to less than 10 percent. "Essentially, every time there's a merger or one company acquires another company, there's a reduction in force, and there's been furious mergers and acquisitions in the pharma industry, particularly over the past 10 years," says James Hughes, dean of the school of public policy at Rutgers. In 2009, Merck bought Schering-Plough, and Pfizer bought Wyeth. This year Pfizer tried to purchase the British drugmaker AstraZeneca. And the list goes on. Business professor Erik Gordon of the University of Michigan says cutting-edge research isn't being done on closed campuses in the suburbs anymore. "The new innovation in biotech, in genomics is happening elsewhere. It's happening in places where there are graduate educational institutions that have research faculty doing that, and New Jersey really doesn't have that," he says. That's something Roche is acutely aware of as it looks for a buyer. "What really sets this site apart is its location," says Tom Stanton of Jones Lang LaSalle, the real estate firm marketing the site. The site is so big that to show it off, Stanton needs a minibus. Looping through a parking lot with thousands of empty spaces, Stanton stresses how close the campus is to Manhattan, Newark's airport and public transit. "Hiring young, talented people is really important to these companies. And that population of upcoming talent is more into the city life," he says. But even though it's only a good bike ride from Manhattan in a straight line, the Roche campus can feel far away from the city's pulse. Stanton says finding even a single tenant has been difficult. So far, he's shown the campus to 35 companies, and no deal yet. The situation may be even worse for the Merck World Headquarters in Whitehouse Station, N.J. It's about 50 miles from Manhattan — making its 1 million square feet of space harder to fill. But there may be an answer. The state's biotech firms are growing fast, and they may be future tenants for these big pharma campuses. But so far, they've only been leasing small portions of space. Stanton says that could work for something like Roche's Building 123, a six-story structure with a lot of lab space. "That building [would] cost $600 million to re-create today," he says. Young companies would love to get some of its lab space. But they don't need, and can't afford, the whole building. Stanton just has to find a way to carve it up and then get some companies to bite. http://www.npr.org/2014/07/30/33 ... f=1001&ft=1 |
» 猜你喜欢
中山大学-第七医院-招科研助理1名(基因设计和克隆、RNA合成)
已经有1人回复
巴黎萨克雷大学与国家留学基金委合作博士研究生项目-脂质纳米药物/生物材料/多酚递送
已经有10人回复
药物学论文润色/翻译怎么收费?
已经有102人回复
26年申博——已发SCI6篇
已经有13人回复
碱缸的配制
已经有5人回复
新!澳门科技大学诚招2026年秋季药剂学/生物材料方向博士研究生(申请-考核制)
已经有18人回复
澳科大药学院诚招2026年秋季纳米医学/生物材料博士研究生
已经有16人回复
医药口服制剂辅料应用
已经有0人回复
全新推出Tguide®靶向递送方案,突破99% T细胞转染效率
已经有1人回复
Mal-LN29-LNP-mRNA 试剂盒:自带Mal基团,一盒实现抗体筛选与体内靶向验证
已经有0人回复

tang521095870
银虫 (知名作家)
- 应助: 26 (小学生)
- 金币: 544.8
- 散金: 6227
- 红花: 56
- 沙发: 26
- 帖子: 8781
- 在线: 657.3小时
- 虫号: 524629
- 注册: 2008-03-14
- 专业: 中药学

3楼2014-07-31 22:26:37
星海慧儿
荣誉版主 (职业作家)
木虫精灵
- DRDEPI: 17
- 应助: 849 (博后)
- 贵宾: 0.978
- 金币: 22119.4
- 散金: 3714
- 红花: 103
- 沙发: 5
- 帖子: 3828
- 在线: 803.1小时
- 虫号: 568253
- 注册: 2008-06-03
- 专业: 分析化学
- 管辖: 新药研发

2楼2014-07-31 16:09:08












回复此楼