While the work-from-home movement has transformed hundreds of sectors, scientists cannot undertake cutting-edge research from their kitchen tables. Therefore, purpose-built lab space in the right locations is vital if life changing medicines are to be developed and commercialised.
In the Oxford-Cambridge Arc, a region where UK life sciences has a critical mass and is home to giant like Illumina and AstraZeneca, cell and gene therapy companies account for most of lab take-up. Take Oxford, the birthplace of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, as an example: here, cell and gene therapy companies accounted for 67% of take-up. In Cambridge, the proportion is even higher at 71%.
The problem is that we can’t build much-needed lab space fast enough. In fact, availability rates in Oxford and Cambridge are at near-zero. In Cambridge, there is demand for over 1m sq ft of lab space; just 10,000 sq ft is available. In Oxford, there are requirements for 875,000 sq ft, despite just 25,000 sq ft being available to let.
That’s not to say that projects are not coming online, though. Bidwells’ project management group is part of a team collaborating with Harwell Campus and global vaccine producer Moderna to deliver a state-of-the-art research, development and manufacturing centre at the Oxfordshire health tech cluster.
Ability to respond
Moderna’s Innovation and Technology Centre (MITC) will be able to scale up production rapidly in the event of a health emergency, significantly boosting the UK’s ability to respond to future pandemics. The MITC development will be made up of two buildings totalling 145,000 sq ft which will offer UK patients guaranteed access to Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine and the ability to produce jabs targeting a range of other illnesses, such as flu and respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), ensuring NHS patients can access the latest advancements in vaccine technology quickly.
The common refrain from the UK life science industry is that the current state of play, with world-class universities but second-rate government investment, means the UK is great for producing start-ups but bad for generating science or tech giants in the way the US does. A lack of physical infrastructure is severely hampering the growth ambitions of the unicorns of tomorrow.
Liberalisation of the planning system, which continues to lock out promising
start-ups and scale-ups from the market, will be vital.
As first appeared in React News