NBAF site work progresses

? Before construction of the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility can begin, Kansas State University and the city of Manhattan must prepare the site, a process that is now on the fast track.

Kansas State officials said they are working quickly to secure the plan and begin the move. Part of the agreement to bring the facility to Manhattan was that the 48-acre site would be cleared and utilities prepared for construction.

The sooner the site is cleared, the sooner NBAF can start the move.

The College of Veterinary Medicine and the College of Agriculture have facilities in the footprint of the proposed site. Those facilities maintain large animal teaching herds. This includes space to care for and do research on those animals. The College of Agriculture’s grain mill is also in the site footprint.

The veterinary medicine facilities will be relocated. Ralph Richardson, dean of the College of Veterinary Medicine, said he expects the facilities to be open in August or September.

The grain mill will be relocated once a new mill is built at the grain science center. Fred Cholick, the dean of the College of Agriculture and soon the president of the KSU Foundation, said the mill is not in a primary area and can be moved when a new facility is complete in two years.

The city must also move water lines that currently pass through the site. City Manager Ron Fehr said work has begun in moving those lines to the north of the site. Officials with the Department of Homeland Security have said they hope to break ground by late summer.

Part of the local incentive package that helped to secure NBAF’s move to Manhattan was $32 million for site demolition, facility and utility preparation and relocation. The state Legislature authorized $150 million in incentives for the facility, said Chad Bettes, director of marketing and communication for the Kansas Bioscience Authority.

However, since the finalization of NBAF’s relocation to Manhattan was less than a year ago, the plan has had to come together quickly and a final dollar estimate is unavailable, said Jerry Jaax, associate vice president for research compliance.

“The ink’s not very dry on how that’s going to be parsed out,” Jaax said.

For Cholick and Richardson, the move consists of a period of inconvenience that ultimately will be worth the hassle for the colleges. They will get new facilities from the process.

And school officials say the move of facilities will be worth the trouble to have NBAF in such close proximity to the colleges. Gary Anderson, director of the veterinary college’s diagnostic lab, said the college is excited about the relationship it will have with researchers at NBAF.

“They’re solid scientists and we’re going to enhance their program and they’re going to enhance ours,” Anderson said.