Construction began in late 2012. It was built on a budget of 385 million. Perkins serves as the symbolic face of the centre, aimed at researching and finding solutions to various illnesses, with over 900 clinicians, students and researchers. Professor Steve Simpson said that "He [Perkins] sought to lead collaborations in situations where a single person or agency could not deliver. In the same way, the Charles Perkins Centre looks beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries to improve the health of individuals, communities and the nation". Perkins' wife, Eileen and their daughters
Hetti,
Rachel and son Adam attended the black-tie opening of the building in June 2014 at which artists including
Megan Washington, the Ltyentye Apurte Dance Group and students from the
Sydney Conservatorium of Music performed. The building has of floor space and is six storeys tall with four basement levels. The centre can house 950 researchers and 1400 students, with both wet and dry laboratory spaces. The ground and basement levels contain clinical facilities in affiliation with the
Royal Prince Alfred Hospital. The full-height interior
atrium is reminiscent of the atrium inside the
Guggenheim Museum in
New York City. Having been called the "
skeletal system of the building", the atrium features curved balconies and interconnecting sweeping stair cases, serving as the structural expression of the building's purpose. It is the most prominent and noticeable feature of the centre's interior. The curving atrium was designed by architects Francis-Jones Morehen Thorp who collaborated with the Cubic Group responsible for the fabrication and installation of the primary atrium elements. Additionally, it features a bank of glazed elevators common in atrium-style buildings. The northern facade of the building was designed in
sandstone, reflecting the
Gothic architecture of the nearby
St John's College. The main southern exterior, which looks out onto the
Centenary Institute, was designed primarily in glass and
aluminium. The building features a large high-tech teaching "X-Lab", capable of hosting 8 different practical classes concurrently, multipurpose teaching spaces, microscopy teaching labs, study pods, a 360-seat auditorium and a café. Clinical facilities include a whole-body calorimeter, metabolic kitchen, exercise physiology gymnasiums, physical testing facilities, phlebotomy bays, biobank, clinical and pre-clinical imaging facilities including one of the world's only 7T and 4T
MRIs, CT, X-ray and ultrasound; long-term stay beds, wet and dry research labs and more. Research facilities include seven open-plan laboratories with adjacent open-plan office spaces and associated support rooms, capable of each hosting 10 research groups, an animal house facility, and core facilities in cellular imaging and
super-resolution microscopy, pre-clinical and clinical imaging,
cytometry,
genomics and
proteomics. The centre served as the "Signature Building" of
ArchiCAD 21. ==Gallery==