The WSU Health Sciences Spokane campus, despite owned and operated by WSU Spokane since 1998, and renamed after it in 2015, has, throughout its entire history and still does to this day, shared the campus with a number of various academic institutions, business incubators, and business accelerators from across the Spokane area and State of Washington. Beyond just being co-located on the same campus, the entities have also had a history of collaborating academically As of August 2023, this building is now named the Medicine Building, and is for the exclusive use of Washington State University and its Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine. Eastern Washington University will expand its Spokane presence in the fall of 2020 by occupying the newly built Catalyst Building, the first
zero-energy building in Spokane as well as the first office building to be constructed out of
cross-laminated timber in the State of Washington. While close to the WSU Spokane Health Sciences campus, the Catalyst is not located on the campus. Several programs will be relocated into the building from its main campus in nearby
Cheney, Washington.
Washington State University Spokane Washington State University operates its
Health Sciences Spokane campus operates from the now-eponymously named campus, housing three colleges, its
College of Nursing,
College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and
Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine.
University of Washington Ignite Northwest Ignite Northwest is a local business accelerator that was founded in 2015 in the wake of the defunding and shutdown of the state-funded Innovate Washington. Its functions can be seen as similar to that of the former Innovate Washington agency, however, as an accelerator as opposed to incubator, it is involved in a later stage of a business start-up timeline. It occupies space in the Ignite Northwest Building, which is the Spokane Technology Center that was originally constructed by SIRTI. WSU Spokane is one of Ignite Northwest's partners The school occupied space in the then-named Innovate Washington Building, originally the SIRTI Building, which was the first building to be built on the campus, and remained there for one year, before outgrowing the space and relocating to a new location within school district's attendance boundaries north of Spokane in the fall of 2013. The school's original location near Downtown Spokane on a higher education campus was intended to provide several new opportunities for learning. These included networking and mentoring opportunities through Greater Spokane Incorporated (GSI), a local economic-development organization, as well as collaboration opportunities with the university community. Access to university libraries was provided for Riverpoint Academy students, and several college-level classes were also taught by EWU Spokane staff. Innovate Washington was defunded by the Washington State Legislature in February 2014, and shut down in June of that year. Some of it operations were assumed by the non-profit Innovate Washington Foundation. One of its buildings, the original SIRTI Building, was turned over to Washington State University while the non-profit organization assumed ownership of the Spokane Technology Center. The foundation was later relaunched as Ignite Northwest and still occupies space on the WSU Health Sciences Spokane campus.
Spokane Intercollegiate Research & Technology Institute (SIRTI) SIRTI was a state-funded business incubator and predecessor state agency to Innovate Washington. It created in 1994 under the administration the Joint Center for Higher Education (JCHE), the entity which had originally developed the WSU Health Sciences Spokane campus. In 1998, when the JCHE was dissolved, SIRTI was spun off into a separate state agency and given ownership the building it occupied, along with of land, while ownership of the rest of the then-named Riverpoint Higher Education Park campus was transferred over to WSU Spokane. SIRTI broke ground on a second building on the campus, which was named the Spokane Technology Center, in March 2005, on a parcel of land that it acquired from WSU Spokane for $850,000. The building was designed to have about 28,000 to 29,000 square feet of leasable area, 12,000 of which was dedicated as
wet lab space designed primarily for pharmaceutical or biotechnology research in hopes of supporting the goal of making the WSU Health Sciences campus a biotech-health care center. In June 2011, a bill was signed by then-Washington State Governor
Christine Gregoire that abolished SIRTI and its Seattle-based Washington Technology Center counterpart. The two were merged into a new state agency to be called Innovate Washington, with the change taking effect on August 1, 2011. ==References==