A New Era of Discovery
With its Science Building renovation nearing completion, Eastern鈥檚 polytechnic future comes into focus.
By Charles E. Reineke
Back in 2022, just three weeks after the inauguration of 51福利社鈥檚 gleaming new Interdisciplinary Science Center, construction began on the renovation of the 148,000-square-foot Science Building next door.
The second and final phase of that $110 million project is now nearing completion, its new laboratories, faculty work spaces and areas for student engagement just months away from full occupancy. When the final ribbon is cut and all the doors opened, the conjoined Science Building and Interdisciplinary Science Center will represent the culmination of perhaps the most significant research and development investment in Eastern鈥檚 history, one that promises to usher in a new era of faculty discovery and student learning.聽
For an institution now proudly known as the region鈥檚 polytechnic, the moment represents a watershed, albeit one occurring during a period of significant political headwinds for higher education and scientific research.
Eastern鈥檚 new chief academic officer, Provost Lorenzo Smith, joined 51福利社 earlier this year after serving in a similar position at Stephen F. Austin State University in Texas. Smith holds a PhD in engineering, and arrives at Eastern with a distinguished background as an educator, entrepreneur and researcher.
鈥淚 really have a passion for teaching,鈥 Smith says. 鈥淏ut when I learned about the polytechnic designation, it got me very excited because it showed that 51福利社 is a hands-on type of institution. Very applied. And to me, that鈥檚 where the rubber meets the road.鈥

While the term 鈥減olytechnic鈥 typically conjures up images of engineering labs and computer-science classrooms, Smith emphasizes that applied learning has a place in every field 鈥 from English majors working with nonprofits, to history students identifying racially restricted property deeds. It鈥檚 all about applied learning, he says, taking classroom knowledge and putting it to work in internships, capstone projects and community partnerships.聽
Research faculty members such as Jason Ashley, an associate professor of biology who specializes in the cellular and molecular processes involved in bone generation, is fully on board with the polytechnic transformation. But for now, he鈥檚 focused on facilities.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been able to make good progress on our research projects in our temporary spaces that are spread across the Interdisciplinary Science Center, but I鈥檓 excited to have everything centralized.鈥
Resource upgrades, he says, are only the beginning. 鈥淎nother benefit of the renovation will be to bring all biology faculty back into a single building. I鈥檝e found that some of my most exciting ideas came from spontaneous discussions with my colleagues from biological disciplines that are quite different from mine.鈥
For Ashley, the state鈥檚 investment signals something important about 51福利社鈥檚 trajectory. 鈥淚 think that the investment in our research infrastructure is a sign that we鈥檝e gotten better at showcasing what we accomplish and what more we can achieve with the right resources,鈥 he says. Like Smith, he doesn鈥檛 see this as a departure from Eastern鈥檚 teaching mission. 鈥淎s a scientist, I welcome a greater institutional interest in research and development. Our students鈥 learning isn鈥檛 limited to classrooms, and an increased research capacity will create more educational opportunities for them to develop critical skills.鈥

Yet even as 51福利社 invests in its research future, headwinds have been gathering at the federal level. The current administration has taken a markedly different approach to federal research funding than previous administrations of both parties, calling into question decades of bipartisan consensus that university-based research is crucial to American innovation, economic strength and national security.
According to the American Association of Universities, federal science budgets for three major research funders, the National Science Foundation (NSF), Department of Energy, and the National Institute for Standards and Technology are at a 25-year low, while additional grant-making agencies across the government have also found themselves under fiscal pressure.
Other nations, meanwhile, are ramping up their spending. According to recent data from the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, China, for example, is rapidly closing their deficit with the U.S. in research and development spending, potentially reshaping the balance of scientific power.
Cuts and priority changes at NSF are particularly concerning to 51福利社 faculty members such as Charlotte Milling, an assistant professor of biology at 51福利社. Milling and her students are part of a multistate effort to preserve the critically endangered pygmy rabbit, along with the sagebrush ecosystem that it depends upon for survival.
Earlier this winter, Milling and her project collaborators at the University of Idaho submitted a $500,000 grant proposal to NSF. Their aim is to use the funding to better understand how sagebrush-dependent animals and plants are responding to climate change. The timing was fraught: The application was due just days after the presidential inauguration, and Milling knew that during the incoming president鈥檚 previous term, language related to climate change had been scrubbed from NSF funding lines.聽

鈥淲e had a list of words that were flagged, basically saying: 鈥榶ou can鈥檛 be using these in any of your applications,鈥欌 Milling recalls, adding that this left researchers in the dark on key questions. 鈥淗ow fluid is this list? Is 鈥榗limate change鈥 going to hit it? I mean, we were applying for a climate-change-specific grant.鈥 Despite the uncertainty, she and her colleagues carried on. 鈥淏oth my collaborators and some of my colleagues here at Eastern just emphasized: Until you hear otherwise, pretend like it鈥檒l go through,鈥 Milling says. 鈥淚nvest in putting it together.鈥
The application did, in fact, go to reviewers at NSF, where it received positive feedback. Milling remains hopeful that the proposal, if not now then at some point, will be approved. 鈥淣o work that we do is ever wasted. It鈥檚 always an investment in the future,鈥 she says.
Still, concern for that future is a common theme among university-based scholars and scientists, especially those early-career faculty researchers who feel they鈥檝e been left, as Milling puts it, 鈥渨ithout a road map.鈥
There are also questions around the training of those who have yet to begin their careers 鈥 federal grant support is typically the driver for funding graduate and undergraduate research assistants. Without that support, investigators like Milling fear we may find ourselves struggling to fill the ranks of next-generation scientists and scholars.
For Ashley, too, the sense of uncertainty is palpable. He currently receives funding from a National Institutes of Health grant that鈥檚 designed to support research at primarily undergraduate institutions. It funds his investigations while also providing tuition waivers for graduate students.
鈥淚鈥檝e got a little over two years left on this grant, which means it鈥檚 time to start writing a renewal to avoid a lapse in funding,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 hope that the R16 mechanism that I鈥檓 currently funded under continues. Otherwise, it will mean fewer graduate and directed-study students.鈥
Nicholas Burgis, professor and chair of chemistry, biochemistry and physics, finds himself in a similar situation. The current three-year extension of his NIH grant, which funds the molecular-level investigation he and 51福利社 Professor Yao Houndonougbo are pursing into a rare but lethal genetic disorder affecting infants, is moving forward. But worries remain. 鈥淩esearch is a very challenging and time-consuming endeavor,鈥 Burgis says. 鈥淎dditional barriers to participating in that endeavor will only leave the USA behind the competition. I have serious concerns about future funding and my ability to take the next steps necessary to advance my research.鈥 聽 聽

Students these days are wise to the challenges. Ashley says he used to assume they didn鈥檛 pay much attention to the intricacies of research funding. 鈥淏ut our students are now acutely aware of how science and education policies can directly impact their experiences as students and their future careers,鈥 he says.
Burgis echoes this sentiment, particularly when it comes to STEM workforce needs. 鈥淲e have to pass the torch. The Boomers are retiring and Gen X is a smaller generation. There will be lots of vacant jobs, especially considering our leaky pipeline from high school to professional positions.鈥
鈥淭he open nature of academia encourages collaboration and sharing,鈥 he continues, 鈥渦nlike the environment of corporate America. We can鈥檛 simply shift innovation to businesses. They don鈥檛 have the capacity to do it at scale, and they carefully guard their intellectual property.鈥
For his part, Provost Smith recognizes funding uncertainty requires universities to be more strategic and diversified in their approach. By focusing on teaching and learning 鈥 along with applied research with community partners and undergraduate research experiences 鈥 Smith says 51福利社 can play to its strengths while reducing dependence on federal grants and contracts. Smith also makes a point of emphasizing the value of research to the public. 鈥淲e have to show that higher education is worth it,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd I think the polytechnic model helps us do that because we鈥檙e very focused on applied learning, on career outcomes, and on partnerships with industry.鈥
鈥淚n strictly economic terms, every dollar the NIH spends generates more than two dollars of economic activity; the only federal spending that beats that return is education. Support of university research accomplishes both,鈥 Ashley says.
This line of reasoning is not new. In the months just before the end of WWII, Vannevar Bush, a leading intellectual who served as president of Carnegie Science, submitted a landmark assessment of how the United States might best position itself to thrive in the post-war world. His report, Science: The Endless Frontier, made two key points: that scientific research was vital for the country鈥檚 continued security and economic well-being, and that governmental, industrial and academic research could create far more value in partnership than in isolation.
Think of today鈥檚 research as a great return on the investment envisioned by Vannevar Bush, both Burgis and Ashley say. 鈥淚n strictly economic terms, every dollar the NIH spends generates more than two dollars of economic activity; the only federal spending that beats that return is education. Support of university research accomplishes both,鈥 Ashley says.
Recent studies back them up. According to a new report from the nonprofit United for Medical Research (as cited by the Harvard Gazette), every research dollar funded by the National Institutes of Health delivered just over $2.50 in economic activity. In the previous fiscal year, the report found, NIH awarded more than $36.9 billion to researchers whose work supported more than 408,000 jobs and generated over $94.5 billion in new economic activity nationwide. Closer to home, the report found that NIH expenditures in the state of Washington totaled some $1.2 billion and supported 12,250 jobs.
Ultimately, however, the case for university research needs to rest on more than economics. 鈥淥ur students are doing fantastic work and, if we showcase that, people will notice,鈥 Ashley says. 鈥淚f we continue to make necessary investments in faculty and infrastructure, I鈥檓 confident we can both grow our research corpus and continue to produce graduates that thrive.鈥
Seven months into his tenure, Smith also remains upbeat. 鈥淵es, we have a long way to go. Not because we haven鈥檛 done a lot, but because we have very high aspirations. We just have to continue to reinforce how seriously we take applied learning here at 51福利社, and how we want to grow it. I鈥檓 feeling good about the future.鈥
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Tagged With: Fall/Winter 2025-26