UNMC names future research center in honor of Charles Durham

In recognition of his generous gift, the University of Nebraska Medical

Center has named its newest research building in honor of Omaha philanthropist

Charles Durham.

The announcement was made on Oct. 23 during a ceremony in the facility

that will bear the Durham name. The facility — formerly the Research Center

of Excellence — will now be called the Durham Research Center. The adjoining

plaza area 45th Street from Emile Street to Dewey Avenue and Dewey Avenue

from 45th Street to 44th Street — also was named the Durham Research Plaza.

The amount of the gift is not being made public at Durhams request.

UNMC Chancellor Harold M. Maurer, M.D., served as emcee of the ceremony,

which included remarks by several university, business and governmental

leaders.

The $77 million building, which is expected to open next fall along

45th Street, is being funded entirely by private donations. The 10-level,

289,000 gross-square-foot building will enable UNMC to enhance its research

in a number of areas including cancer, cardiovascular diseases, neurosciences,

transplantation biology, genetics and eye research.

Today is an extraordinary day for UNMC, Dr. Maurer said. These individuals

and organizations have made an exceptional investment in the medical center

and in our future. Their passion and generosity are responsible for the

building that is rising above us and around us. They believe as we do,

that this state-of-the-art research facility and the research it will house

will further fuel our quest to be world class, enable us to make more headway

in diagnosing and treating and hopefully preventing many of the diseases

that still plague Nebraska and the nation today, and offer a new and exciting

educational environment for our students as they learn to be tomorrows

health professionals and scientists.

Principal donors of the Durham Research Center are: Durham Foundation;

Peter Kiewit Foundation; Suzanne and Walter Scott Jr.; Ruth and Bill Scott;

Stanley Truhlsen, M.D.; Mary and Dick Holland; The Dr. C.C. and Mabel L.

Criss Memorial Foundation; Gail Walling Yanney, M.D., and Michael Yanney;

and a donor who has asked to remain anonymous.

This research facility has the potential to make a difference in so

many lives, Durham said. It is an honor to be associated with a medical

center that has a vision to be world-class, to improve the health of all

Nebraskans and beyond, advance medical knowledge through research and educate

outstanding health professionals and scientists.

Durham serves as chairman of the board and chief executive officer of

Durham Resources. Previously, he served as chairman and CEO of HDR, Inc.,

an international engineering and architectural firm with work in all 50

states and 20 countries.

Durham and his late wife, Margre, have been generous contributors to

UNMC. In 1998, they established the Charles W. and Margre H. Durham Excellence

in Medicine fund at UNMC to support research in prostate cancer, arthritis

and minimally invasive surgery. Their support made it possible for UNMC

to be the eighth medical center in the country to acquire the robotic da

Vinci Surgical System, putting Nebraska on the map in the area of computer-assisted

surgery. In recognition of their gift, the Outpatient Care Center was renamed

the Durham Outpatient Center and the adjacent five-level parking garage

which connects to the building was named the Durham Outpatient Center Parking.

UNMC leaders today also announced that different floors and areas of

the Durham Research Center would be named in honor of the primary donors.

The named floors/areas include the Peter Kiewit Foundation Transplant Biology

Research Laboratories, Scott Education Center (Suzanne and Walter Scott

Jr.), the Scott Neuroscience Research Laboratories (Ruth and Bill Scott),

Cardiovascular Research Laboratories, Truhlsen Eye Research Laboratories,

Yanney Seminar Center, and the Criss Foundation Seminar Center.