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'Celebrity' arrives in Kannapolis: One of world's strongest magnets installed at research campus


Workers make final preparations to begin lifting the Bruker 950 mhz NMR magnet into place. Photo by David Livengood, for the Salisbury Post



The 950 mhz NMR magnet is lowered to the delivery shaft for installation in the NMR Suite at the Core Lab. Photo by David Livengood, for the Salisbury Post



The lab where the NMRs will be installed. Photo by David Livengood, for the Salisbury Post


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By Emily Ford

eford@salisburypost.com

KANNAPOLIS — The 950 has arrived.

The N.C. Research Campus took delivery Monday on the Avance II 950 US2, one of the world's strongest magnets and the celebrity occupant of the Core Lab basement.

The instrument, a 950 megahertz Nuclear Magnetic Resonance spectrometer with the strongest actively shielded superconducting magnet in the world, puts the Research Campus at the forefront of the biotechnology industry even before scientists in downtown Kannapolis have conducted a single experiment.

"It's exciting to have the first NMR 950 deployed in the United States right here," said Dr. Steven Colman, interim chief of operations for the David H. Murdock Research Institute.

The world's first 950 went to Frankfurt, Germany. Kannapolis has the second. A third machine will arrive in Paris next month.

"It's smaller than I thought it would be," said James Ewing, who walked over from his home on Ridge Avenue to watch the delivery. "One person can save a city, and that's what I think Murdock is doing."

Research Campus founder David H. Murdock, billionaire owner of Castle & Cooke and Dole Food Co., bought the eight-ton instrument last summer and donated it to his research institute, which owns and operates the Core Lab.

The 950 is the flagship in an armada of NMR equipment in Kannapolis that includes four other systems. It will allow researchers to view molecules at an unprecedented resolution.

German manufacturer Bruker Biospin shipped the instrument about six weeks ago to the Port of Baltimore. ARK Machinery Movers trucked the pieces to Kannapolis, where four Bruker engineers were waiting to assemble it.

"This is a unique site because every system is arriving at once," said Chris Knapp, a Bruker engineer from California. "That is huge."

A small crowd of campus scientists and construction workers watched a 100-ton crane hoist the magnet while engineers removed shipping restraints and pulled off plastic wrap.

Phyllis Beaver, campus marketing director, came on her day off to watch.

"I just couldn't stay away," she said. "It's addictive."

The crane slowly lowered the magnet through a concrete delivery shaft into the basement NMR suite, where engineers will spend the next month assembling, cooling and energizing four systems.

They will install a fifth system on the fourth floor.

In the basement, engineers floated the 950 on air casters, moving it into position.

The instrument will stand about 14 feet high on permanent legs, and a platform surrounding it will allow scientists to reach various probes.

"The 950 is something really special," said Doug Lyons, a Bruker engineer from Massachusetts. "The higher the field, the better the resolution."

The Bruker engineering team included Wolfgang Welker and Christian Fritz, both based in Germany.

Another Bruker engineer will spend a year in Kannapolis tweaking the instruments.

Campus tenants like Duke University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and N.C. State University will rent time on the machines.

Dr. Leonard Spicer of Duke and Dr. John Cavanagh of N.C. State will oversee the NMR suite temporarily until Murdock's research institute hires an NMR director, Colman said.

Spicer watched the installation Monday afternoon with his colleagues, who gave a thumbs up when workers turned the suspended magnet to reveal the words "Bruker 950 US2."





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: Tuesday, August 05, 2008 1:17 PM

Regardless of Mr. Murdock's prior unscrupulous business practices that pretty much ruined Kannapolis, you have to step back and commend what's going on there. To say that the little mill town in NC has one of only two 950s in the world is quite a statement. It is reminiscent of the 80s, when Kannapolis was the country's largest unincorporated town. Will the people that live in Kannapolis see any benefit of the Research institute? Sure...once it opens and is fully operational in a few more years, other businesses will come in. Although you may not be qualified to operate one of these behemoths, you are surely qualified to work in another business that comes in as a result of the campus, not to mention janitorial staff for the campus.
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: Tuesday, August 05, 2008 11:58 AM

I think what is happening in K-town is great but let's not forget what happened to get here today. Mr. Murdock raped the retirement fund of the Cannon employees, broke apart the company keeping the real estate ( houses and land parcels) and disposed of the mills only to buy them back at pennies on the dollar from what he sold them for. I have a hard time applauding this man for the research center when he destroyed the lives of many people for this own personal gains.
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: Tuesday, August 05, 2008 10:12 AM

From these comments, you would think that Mr. Murdock owes each and every citizen of Kannapolis something. I don't see how that's the case. All these comments seem to be negative as if a campus full of empty old mill buildings would have been better. Please! As for all the commenters who have nothing good to say about the progress, keep up the good work...your positive attitudes are what provide fuel for change and improvement in your lives and your world!
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SH
Buy the city : Tuesday, August 05, 2008 9:23 AM

I'm not originally from NC, but moved to Kannapolis 3 years ago after purchasing a house just 2 blocks from Cannon Village. I work in Charlotte now after a recent job change and would welcome a neighborhood buyout so that they can improve housing in the area (a 2 bed/ 1 bath house is OK for a single woman, but not for a family) and then I can move closer to my new office to avoid the 45 minute commute. If he wants to save the city, he needs to make improvements throughout Kannapolis, not just erect the research campus!
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One person can save a city? : Tuesday, August 05, 2008 8:01 AM

Please. It only take one person to make a change, but I would hardly call what Murdock is doing "saving the city." If you could see and hear the things these new people are saying about Kannapolis and its residents you wouldn't be so eager for them to get here. Murdock isn't saving our city. He's changing it into what he wants and you can trust me when I say it doesn't include those of us who were born and raised here. And, no, I didn't work in the mill and neither did either of my parents. I'm under 40 and college educated, but I am still not "good enough" for the stepford town that Murdock and his group has in mind...
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