Skip to main content

Home/ MaRS/ Group items tagged John

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Assunta Krehl

John Evans family donates $10-million to MaRS - The Globe and Mail - February 23, 2012 - 1 views

  •  
    The family of Dr. John Evans, an innovator in both medicine and business, is donating $10-million to the Toronto MaRS Discovery District. The money will be used to create a MaRS Solutions Lab, which will be designed to help tackle a range of problems - from the commercialization of medical discoveries to global health issues - while providing opportunities for young Canadians, who will have the chance to become fellows at MaRS.
Assunta Krehl

The anti-Steve Jobs: Why innovation pioneer John Evans donated millions to MaRS - The S... - 0 views

  •  
    Dr. John Evans, co-founder of MaRS Discovery District doanted $10 million to MaRS last week to launch a Solutions Lab.
Assunta Krehl

Test-tube industry - Canadian Business - 0 views

  • For Dr. John Evans, growing a strong biotechnology industry is much the same: cities must provide a nurturing environment where science and business can thrive together.
  • That's why Evans, former president of the University of Toronto and current chairman of Torstar Corp., is spearheading the $345-million Medical and Related Science initiative, or MaRS--a petri dish of sorts for commercializing science research. "A lot of intellectual property is being commercialized outside Canada," says Evans. "I think we've been slow in realizing just how important technology developments are to the economic future of the country. MaRS is an attempt to give this a kick into a higher gear." The centrepiece of the MaRS plan, which will officially launch May 12, is a 1.3-million-square-foot, five-building complex in downtown Toronto that will provide office and lab space for small and medium-size companies and incubators, including the not-for-profit Toronto Biotechnology Commercialization Centre. While Evans is reluctant to limit its scope, MaRS will generally focus on health-related technologies, from new drugs and genetic treatments to medical devices and imaging software. Branded a "convergence centre," it will also house a careful mix of support services: intellectual property lawyers, accountants, marketing experts, government funding organizations and venture capital financiers. Plus, start-ups will have access to all the latest equipment on site. For instance, MaRS is in talks with MDS Sciex to supply mass spectrometers, used in proteomics research.
  • But MaRS will be more than just a New Economy real estate development. Evans's intention is to funnel tenants' rent money into services--such as entrepreneurship seminars and angel-matching programs--that MaRS will offer to the broader biotech community. That's why MaRS's location is key: the centre will be built in the heart of what Toronto has dubbed the "Discovery District," a two-square-kilometre chunk of the downtown core, encompassing U of T and four major hospitals. From there, MaRS hopes to act as a network hub across Ontario, with links to research-intensive universities. "None of them," says Evans, "have the critical mass to put it all together on their own."
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • MaRS's primary goal is to get Toronto and the rest of Ontario on the global biotech map. Evans came up with the concept in the late 1990s with Dr. Calvin Stiller, CEO of the labor-sponsored Canadian Medical Discoveries Fund, and Kenneth Knox, a former deputy minister for the Ontario government who's now CEO of MaRS
  • As far as schemes to support fledgling industries go, MaRS is refreshing. To start, it's a nonprofit corporation, not a government program, which will hopefully ensure that it runs more efficiently. The feds and the province of Ontario have each doled out $20 million for MaRS, and Toronto has donated in-kind $4.5 million. More than $12 million has come from a small pool of corporations, including Eli Lilly Canada and MDS, as well as individual donors like Joseph Rotman and Lawrence Bloomberg (who both sit on the MaRS board). U of T pitched in $5 million, and MaRS also did some innovative bond financing to round off the $165 million needed to build Phase I. "It was very important for us to not belong to anybody," says Evans.
  • Now MaRS's challenge is to get the word out. Its posted rate of $26 per square foot is very competitive for prime downtown real estate and is sure to attract attention, especially considering its customized lab space. But MaRS's success won't be measured by a low vacancy rate; getting the right mix of scientists, entrepreneurs and professionals is critical if it plans to commercialize some sustainable businesses. It won't happen overnight--in fact, it may be 10 years before anyone can gauge MaRS's impact. Seems growing a biotech industry isn't quite as easy as growing E. coli in a petri dish.
  •  
    John Evans spearheads the MaRS project which will help to accelerate commercialization for scientific research. The official launch of the MaRS plan will happen on May 12, 2003.
Assunta Krehl

Science at The Summit - CBC Radio - Ideas - 0 views

  •  
    Two leading Canadian medical researchers - Benjamin Neel, and John Wallace - discuss what it takes to rise through the ranks and ultimately arrive at the lofty pinnacle where true scientific advancements are made. Both received the $5 million 2009 Premier's Summit Awards. John Dirks, President of the Gairdner Foundation, moderates the discussion, recorded at the MaRS innovation centre in Toronto. Sept 10, 2009
Assunta Krehl

SqueezePlay : May 11, 2009 : [05-11-09 5:00PM] - 0 views

  • BNN interviews Gordon Nixon, incoming chair, MaRS Discovery District; John Evans, outgoing chair, MaRS Discovery District.
  •  
    BNN interviews Gordon Nixon, incoming chair, MaRS Discovery District; John Evans, outgoing chair, MaRS Discovery District.
Assunta Krehl

Toronto News: Evans family gives MaRS $10M to create experimental lab - The Star - Febr... - 1 views

  •  
    The family of Dr. John Evans, a co-founder of the MaRS Discovery District is donating $10 million to create a new experimental lab.
Assunta Krehl

Presidents Emeriti honoured on their 80th birthdays - News@UofT - June 4, 2010 - 0 views

  •  
    President Emeritus John Evans (1972-1978) and President Emeritus George Connell (1984-1990) tried out the new benches, just steps away from two oak trees planted 10 years ago in their honour at the University of Toronto. Dr. Evans is the Chair Emeritus of the MaRS Discovery District.
Assunta Krehl

Science City - The Globe and Mail - 0 views

  • This is Toronto's research district, a maze of concrete and glass where the finest minds collaborate, turning the city into a global centre of biomedical discovery.
  • Nine research institutes employing 5,000 university faculty members, 2,000 graduate students and 1,100 postdoctoral and clinical fellows lie within a 20-minute walk of each other. This biomedical cluster at the heart of Toronto is one of the largest on the continent, and is one of the 10 largest in the world.
  • Tom Hudson from Montreal; cell biologist Ben Neel from Boston; and stem-cell biologist Gordon Keller, who came to Toronto in 2006, just months after New York magazine named him one of the scientists that city could not afford to lose. Toronto is also home to Tak Mak, who discovered the "key to the immune system" T-cell receptor, and John Dick, who discovered the first cancer stem cell in 1994 and last year grew a human cancer in a lab mouse for the first time.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • "There's an enthusiasm in the research community that's very exciting to be part of," says Dr. Keller, who now heads the McEwan Centre for Regenerative Medicine.
  • Dr. Hudson, who left Quebec to head the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research, says the city's "tremendous power" is built on a strong history: Stem-cell research began here. "It's innovative," he says of Toronto. "I've never felt closer in my research career to thinking we will have an impact. I feel my goals are going to happen here."
  • Still, John Evans, board chairman of the non-profit MaRS Centre, which helps to turn research into viable businesses, envisages a day when research is seen as a social and economic driver, and the city shines as brightly as better-known centres such as Boston and Palo Alto.
  •  
    Tenille Bonoguore, Globe and Mail features the MaRS Centre and meets 12 of its' "best specimens." MaRS is one of the 10 largest biomedical clusters in the continent.
  •  
    Tenille Bonoguore, Globe and Mail features the MaRS Centre and meets 12 of its' "best specimens." Bonoguore states "MaRS Centre is one of the 10 largest biomedical clusters in the continent." Jan 5, 2008
Assunta Krehl

Ministry of Research and Innovation - 0 views

  • The Premier’s Summit Award builds Ontario’s research prowess by recognizing exceptional medical researchers and helping them expand their programs. These winners are internationally recognized leaders whose work is transformative in their fields. Each winner will receive up to $5 million over a five-year period: a $2.5 million contribution from the award program matched by $2.5 million from their sponsoring institution. As the following profiles demonstrate, the Premier’s Summit Award supports researchers who have made a substantial contribution and show promise to do even more.
  • Dr. Benjamin Neel The Campbell Family Cancer Research Institute at the Princess Margaret Hospital, University Health Network Toronto
  • Dr. John Wallace McMaster University Farncombe Family Digestive Health Research Institute Hamilton
  •  
    Announcement of Dr. Benjamin Neel and Dr. John Wallace as the 2009 recipients of the Premier's Summit Award for Medical Research.
Assunta Krehl

Robarts and WORLDiscoveries go to MaRS - Western News - 0 views

  • The event will mark the official opening of the new WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS.   WORLDiscoveries is a joint business development consortium formed between Western, Robarts and Lawson Health Research Institute to bridge local inventions and global industry.  
  • The MaRS Discovery District is a non-profit innovation centre that connects science, technology and entrepreneurs with business skills, networks and capital to stimulate innovation and accelerate the growth of successful Canadian enterprise
  •  
    John MacDonald, new Director of Robarts Research Institute was at a luncheon at MaRS on March 17 to bring awareness of the leadership role Robarts and The University of Western Ontario, plays in furthering Canada's innovation agenda through the production of leading research. It also mentions about the official opening of WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS.
  •  
    John MacDonald, new Director of Robarts Research Institute was at a luncheon at MaRS on March 17 to bring awareness of the leadership role Robarts and The University of Western Ontario, plays in furthering Canada's innovation agenda through the production of leading research. It also mentions about the official opening of WORLDiscoveries office at MaRS. March 16, 2009
Cathy Bogaart

Time for Canada to own the entrepreneurial podium - The Globe and Mail, Mar 16, 2011 - 0 views

  •  
    MaRS CEO, Ilse Treurnicht, and Board Member, John Manley, are both interviewed for the Action Canada report. This report recommends a national strategy for "owning the podium" in entrepreneurship.
Assunta Krehl

Mayor Unveils "One Cent" Campaign To Force Ottawa Into Funding T.O. - CityNews Toronto ... - 0 views

  •  
    "As stated at CityNews Toronto, Former Toronto Mayor, Miller is challenging the feds to give back to Torontonians a ""small part of the wealth they generate in their city and Toronto will match that gesture with a greater, greener investment in Toronto's environmental, social and economic well-being."" Dr. John Evans from MaRS Discovery District and TRRA was one of 400 experts at the conference. "
Assunta Krehl

Minister of Economic Development and Innovation Presents ORION Leadership Awards - Cana... - 0 views

  •  
    Ilse Treurnicht, CEO of MaRS Discovery District was one of the speakers at the THINK Conference. "The Honourable Brad Duguid, Ontario's Minister of Economic Development and Innovation, presented the ORION Leadership awards on April 16th to high school student Marshall Zhang, John Helliker of Sheridan College and University of Toronto professor Dr. Shana Kelley." 
Assunta Krehl

Wirelessly enabling the long-distance house call - The Globe and Mail - January 20, 2012 - 0 views

  •  
    Dr John Semple helped to created an app that is being in the healthcare industry in Canada for diagnoses. Peter Adams, senior health-care IT adviser, MaRS Discovery District, describs "Dr. Semple's app as the "tip of the iceberg," ... technology and others like it are capable of saving the health-care system millions in unnecessary hospital readmissions, needless suffering and potential deaths."
Assunta Krehl

Sleep Well, Live Better - Business News Network - After Hour - 2 views

  •  
    Business News Network speaks to John Aikman, Director Somnaform. Somnaform is the maker of a special pillow to stop sleep apnea, the leading cause of snoring. Sept 25, 2009
Assunta Krehl

Scratching The Biotech Surface - Backbone Magazine - 0 views

  • We don’t know for sure,” said Dr. John Evans, chair of the board of directors at MARS (Medical and Related Sciences) Discovery District in Toronto, and vicechair of Mississauga, Ont.-based NPSAllelix Biopharmaceuticals, one of the pioneers of biotech in Canada. “But we believe that if you could ‘type’ the patient processes of how he/she handles a drug, you could peel off those people who would be particularly sensitive to a drug. Then you could find a sub-population where the drug is safe and highly effective.” Evans used the arthritis drug Vioxx as an example. It helped millions of people battle painful inflammation, but was pulled from the market recently because of potential cardiac side effects in some people. “If the drug company could have predicted which patients would have complications from Vioxx treatment — through some genetic profiling — then a very powerful and effective drug could have been preserved,” Evans said. His company, NPS-Allelix Bio-pharmaceuticals, has been developing a product since 1989 that will be launched later this year. The drug secretes a parathyroid hormone for treating osteoporosis.
  • It builds up bone matrix and helps build bone, rather than just delay bone loss as other drugs do.
  •  
    The field of biotechnology is a collaboration between research disciplines who have a quantitative view of the world. A review of how human genome affects drug development is reviewed.
  •  
    The field of biotechnology is a collaboration between research disciplines who have a quantitative view of the world. A review of how human genome affects drug development is reviewed. Sept 11, 2005
Assunta Krehl

CNW Group | MARS DISCOVERY DISTRICT | Michael H. McCain joins MaRS Board, Founder Dr. J... - 0 views

  • MaRS Discovery District is pleased to announce the appointment of Michael H. McCain, President and CEO of Maple Leaf Foods Inc., to its Board of Directors.
  • Mr. McCain is looking forward to joining the MaRS Board of Directors as wel
  • Mr. McCain
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • inaugural Fundraising Cabinet, chaired by Hon. John Manley. "I am deeply impressed by the vision of MaRS, and its resolve to bring forth the talents of Canadians in order to build better companies," Mr. McCain said. "MaRS is well-positioned to contribute
  • Mr. McCain
  • o the Canadian economy and is an important player in the development of new, innovative businesses. MaRS can also help bring innovation into existing companies, thus making them more competitive globally."
  •  
    MaRS Discovery District announces the appointment of Michael H. McCain, President and CEO of Maple Leaf Foods Inc., to its Board of Directors.
Assunta Krehl

Dr. Calvin Stiller appointed Chair of Board of Directors - Ontario Institute for Cancer... - 0 views

  • The Board of Directors of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR) has appointed Dr. Calvin Stiller as the Chair of the Board.
  • He succeeds Dr. John Evans, who was the first Chair and who will continue to serve as a board member.
  • Dr. Stiller co-founded the MaRS Centre in Toronto
  •  
    The Board of Directors of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR) has appointed Dr. Calvin Stiller as the Chair of the Board. Mention of Dr. Stiller Co-Founding MaRS.
  •  
    The Board of Directors of the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research (OICR) has appointed Dr. Calvin Stiller as the Chair of the Board. Mention of Dr. Stiller Co-Founding MaRS. Jan 21, 2009
Assunta Krehl

Business newsmaker - The Star - 0 views

  • MARS DISOVERY DISTRICT has appointed businessman and philanthropist Richard Ivey to its board of directors.
  • "Richard Ivey has a strong track record of community involvement and commitment to research and innovation, most recently through his continuing role as chair of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research," said John Evans, founding chair of the board at MaRS. "His integrity and dedication to building a strong foundation for Canada's innovation economy will be of tremendous benefit to MaRS"
  • MaRS is a Toronto non-profit centre linking science, technology and social entrepreneurs with business skills and capital to stimulate innovation and the creation of successful Canadian companies.
  •  
    MARS DISOVERY DISTRICT has appointed businessman and philanthropist Richard Ivey to its board of directors.
  •  
    MaRS Discovery District has appointed businessman and philanthropist Richard Ivey to its board of directors. Feb 20, 2009
Assunta Krehl

CNW Group | ONTARIO MINISTRY OF RESEARCH AND INNOVATION | Ontario Investing In Science ... - 0 views

  • "This investment underscores the government's recognition that Ontario must continue to invest in its strong life sciences cluster. Now more than ever, innovative research and development is a key driver, reshaping the knowledge economy and creating prosperity for all Ontarians." Dr. John Evans, Chair, MaRS Discovery District
  •  
    Ontario announced a new fund to attract and retain world-leading genomics researchers in the province.The $100-million Global Leadership Round in Genomics and Life Sciences will support globally-significant, collaborative research projects that are headquartered in Ontario. Dr. Evans is quoted stating that "the government must recognize that Ontario must invest in strong life science clusters."
1 - 20 of 49 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page