SAHMRI 1 After nearly four years of construction, the institute opened in its new building on 29 November 2013. won several awards in the 2014 South Australian Architecture Awards, awarded by the
Australian Institute of Architects. The firm received the Keith Neighbour Award for Commercial Architecture, the Robert Dickson Award for Interior Architecture, the Jack McConnell Award for Public Architecture, the Derrick Kendrick Award for Sustainable Architecture, and the
Colorbond Award for Steel Architecture. The building was mainly funded by the federal government (), with the
state government putting in into the project, which would also go towards running costs.
SAHMRI 2 Construction of the SAHMRI 2 building, which will house the Australian Bragg Centre for Proton Therapy & Research, starts in July 2020. This will be the first
proton therapy unit in Australia, treating cancer patients with the advanced precision radiation treatment. The building is scheduled to be completed in 2023, with the first patients seen in 2025. Like the first building, SAHMRI 2 has also been designed by Woods Bagot. The federal government is providing and the state government towards the project, part of which will be spent on relocating the Train Control Centre to
Dry Creek. The new building will be adjacent to the
University of Adelaide's Health & Medical Science Building, opened in 2017, on its eastern side. ==Funding==