FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
12 October 2012
Construction Set to Start on New Cawthron High Tech Laboratories to Help Boost Export Earnings
Construction is set to start before Christmas on Cawthron Institute’s new high technology laboratories at its Halifax
Street campus in Nelson. Cawthron is New Zealand’s largest independent research institute specialising in environmental
research and research for the food and aquaculture industries. It also has substantial testing laboratories and provides
seafood safety testing for key sectors of the aquaculture industry.
The new $5 million facility on its Halifax Street site will provide nearly 400 square metres of high specification
laboratory space, to replace some of its present facilities built in the 1970s. In addition to laboratories the building
will also include office space, meeting rooms and staff facilities.
Cawthron Chairman Ian Kearney, says the new building is a key part of Cawthron’s drive and focus on continuing
innovation in scientific research and development.
“A lot of New Zealand’s economic growth and future direction is reliant on innovative science and original thinking
which Cawthron Institute is renowned for. This building is stage one of a four stage project to replace the facilities
and laboratories in the Rigg building on the Halifax Street campus. Many of the facilities in the Rigg building are
outdated and an orderly programme to replace them is now starting.”
Cawthron is now setting the stage to build on its contributions to New Zealand’s economic development of the past 90
years. Earlier this year Cawthron sold its environmental testing business to R. J. Hill Laboratories to refocus on
high-value research and development and the new building underpins this strategy. Cawthron is expanding specialist
analytical services in challenging areas of new method development and health claim validations for foods and
nutraceuticals.
Mr Kearney says, “Some great science has come out of our existing laboratories in Halifax Street which were built in the
1970s. We are now going to be providing 21st century tools and facilities for our scientists. This can only add to the
value of the science we will be progressing.”
For example, Cawthron recently announced the development of very high-value algae compounds, CNCs, which it is selling
to overseas laboratories for hundreds of thousands of dollars a gram.
“Cawthron has always focused on using science to provide solutions to problems and these new facilities will assist”, Mr
Kearney says.
Cawthron Chief Executive Professor Charles Eason, says Cawthron works hand in hand with many companies and the new
building will provide the means to further strengthen its support of the aquaculture and food industries with its
research in shellfish food safety, adding high-end value to foods as well as protection.
The companies we work with are asking us to increase our capacity and our capabilities to help them deliver export
growth. The new buildings and laboratories in Nelson will be a significant step forward and mirror recent growth in
laboratories and shellfish breeding capability at the Cawthron Aquaculture Park at Glenduan, just outside Nelson.
“The new spaces will provide great opportunities for collaboration between Institute colleagues and our business
partners and clients to develop ideas and new projects and products.” Cawthron, which is a not-for-profit organisation,
will self-fund the new facility.
Professor Eason says two key requirements of the building’s design are sustainability and a design in keeping with the
character of the neighbourhood.
“During our time here we hope we have been good neighbours, and because it’s important to us to continue that
relationship we have been careful to create a design that will not only work for us but will also fit in with the
immediate surroundings”.
The two-storey building will be set 10 metres back from the street boundary and include significant landscaping at the
front along the Halifax Street frontage.
Professor Eason said it was a big investment for Cawthron but vital if the Institute was to continue to provide the
science required by our partners. “For example, we more than trebled the size of laboratories and production facilities
at the Cawthron Aquaculture Park two years ago and we are already starting to think of further expansion of these.”
Cawthron Institute has been housed in The Wood for more than 90 years. The Institute headquarters moved in 1970 from
Fellworth House where it was originally established in the 1920s through the almost quarter of a million pound bequest
of its founder Thomas Cawthron. The land on the corner of Halifax and Milton Streets has been the location for other
Cawthron and Department of Scientific and Industrial Research facilities since the 1920s, and Cawthron Museum was
located in Harley House on Milton Street in the 1960s and ‘70s.
ENDS