Skip Navigation

OU Health Sciences Opens Innovative Lab Space

NEWS
Ian Dunn, Darrin Akins, Gary Raskob, James Papin, Dean Myers and Paul Manzelli stand in a line cutting a white ribbon.
OU Health Sciences leaders cutting the ribbon on new laboratory space are, from left: Ian Dunn, M.D., executive dean of the OU College of Medicine; Darrin Akins, Ph.D., vice president for research at OU Health Sciences; Gary Raskob, Ph.D., senior vice president and provost of OU Health Sciences; James Papin, Ph.D., associate vice president for health sciences research; Dean Myers, Ph.D., associate vice president for health sciences research; and Paul Manzelli, CPA, MBA, senior associate vice president for administration and finance. Photo by Jonathan Kyncl.

OU Health Sciences Opens Innovative Lab Space


By

April Wilkerson
april-j-wilkerson@ouhsc.edu

Date

March 10, 2025

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA. – The University of Oklahoma Health Sciences recently announced the opening of more than 29,100 square feet of new laboratory space at University Research Park in Oklahoma City. The innovative facility represents an $11 million investment in OU’s strategic plan to become a top-tier research-driven academic health center.

“By strengthening our campus-wide research infrastructure with investment in new laboratory space, in parallel with advanced technology, we are ensuring that the University of Oklahoma academic health system continues to be at the forefront of scientific discovery,” said OU Health Sciences Senior Vice President and Provost Gary Raskob, Ph.D.

The space includes four large open-concept laboratories and 86 workstations, often called benches, to support as many as 144 scientists. There are dedicated areas for microscopy, cell culture, ultra-low temperature storage and specialized instrumentation. A conference room and collaboration areas are designed to foster interdisciplinary teamwork, teaching and mentoring.

The lab space is designed to support team science, which is quickly becoming the future of research.

“This new space reflects a modern approach to research, intentionally structured to bring together researchers, clinicians and students in a shared environment that accelerates discovery and its translation into real-world applications,” said OU Health Sciences Vice President for Research Darrin Akins, Ph.D.

Expanding research infrastructure is also an investment in people, said OU College of Medicine Executive Dean Ian Dunn, M.D., noting the college recently welcomed the founding chair of the new Department of Molecular Genetics and Genome Sciences.

“This facility will allow us to not only advance knowledge and accelerate the path to new therapeutics, but will it help us attract top-tier researchers, postdoctoral students and graduate students to Oklahoma, as well as retain our world-class faculty,” Dunn said. “This new space is an investment in our future.”

The facility is made possible by a $55 million bond, approved by the OU Board of Regents, to renovate and modernize 96,000 square feet of laboratory space across OU Health Sciences.

In fiscal year 2024, OU Health Sciences researchers earned over $217.5 million in sponsored awards, including $75.2 million from the National Institutes of Health. Last week, OU Health Sciences announced its new Blue Ridge Institute ranking of No. 102 in the nation for NIH funding, a rise of 20 spots from the previous federal fiscal year. This places OU Health Sciences among the top 3.6% of all 2,838 institutions and entities that receive NIH funding.

About the University of Oklahoma

Founded in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a public research university with campuses in Norman, Oklahoma City and Tulsa. As the state’s flagship university, OU serves the educational, cultural, economic and health care needs of the state, region and nation. In Oklahoma City, OU Health Sciences is one of the nation’s few academic health centers with seven health profession colleges located on the same campus. OU Health Sciences serves approximately 4,000 students in more than 70 undergraduate and graduate degree programs spanning Oklahoma City and Tulsa and is the leading research institution in Oklahoma. For more information about OU Health Sciences, visit www.ouhsc.edu.


Recent News

Campus & Community
April 08, 2026

Tiny White Coats, Big Dreams: OU School of Community Medicine’s Doctor for a Day Inspires the Next Generation of Healers

Tiny white coats, stuffed animal patients and big imaginations filled OU School of Community Medicine at OU–Tulsa recently as elementary aged children from across the Tulsa area stepped into the world of medicine during Doctor for a Day, a highly visual, hands on experience designed to spark curiosity about health care careers—and make the doctor’s office feel a little less intimidating.


Campus & Community
April 08, 2026

First-Year Engineering Students Represent OU in National Competition

Two pairs of University of Oklahoma students competed alongside challengers from more than 70 colleges and universities in the 2026 Lockheed Martin Ethics in Engineering Case Competition.


Research
April 08, 2026

Study Identifies Why Nightmares Persist in Children and How to Break the Cycle

Recently published research from the University of Oklahoma and the University of Tulsa proposes a new model to explain why nightmares can persist over time in children and how therapy can be designed to break that cycle.