< 15 years of Saw-whet Owl migration Peregrine, "James," turns nineteen >
On 26 January 2009, Virginia Commonwealth University President, Eugene P. Trani, and College of William and Mary President, Taylor Reveley, signed a memorandum of understanding to share The Center for Conservation Biology. Attended by administrators from both universities and both Bryan Watts and Mitchell Byrd from The Center for Conservation Biology, the signing ceremony took place overlooking the James River in the newly constructed Walter L. Rice Education Building within the VCU Rice Center for Environmental Life Sciences. The agreement represents a commitment by the universities to conservation and to the continued development of The Center for Conservation Biology and its work. It is hoped that the new relationship will lead to greater collaboration that will benefit natural ecosystems and the commonwealth.
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The platinum LEED certified Walter L. Rice Education Building at Virginia Commonwealth University's Inger and Walter Rice Center for Environmental Life Sciences |
The VCU Rice Center is located on 341 acres of forested land along the north shoreline of the James River and situated mid-way between Richmond and Williamsburg. The property was donated by Inger Rice to VCU in 2000 and now houses the regional office of the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries, a research pier, a classroom pavilion, and the 4,900-square-foot, LEED-certified education building with lecture and laboratory rooms, a conference room and administrative offices. As the Rice Center develops, the land will increasingly become a focal point for environmental education and a launching pad for research activity.
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Aerial Photo – A view from the James River showing the Rice Center property including Lake Charles, the VCU-VDGIF research pier, and the newly constructed Walter L. Rice Education Building. |
The Center’s collaboration with VCU and eventual relocation to the Rice property represents an exciting opportunity to greatly enhance the capacity of both organizations to accomplish environmental education and conservation goals. Center staff look forward to a future of rich collaboration with VCU faculty and students addressing a broad range of research questions.
Read more about the collaboration:
The College of William & Mary >>
The College of William & Mary's Ideation Magazine >>
< 15 years of Saw-whet Owl migration Peregrine, "James," turns nineteen >