BCBusiness

November/December 2021 – She’s Got Game

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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Peter Zandstra was attracted to British Columbia from Ontario by a unique opportunity at the Univer- sity of British Columbia—the opportunity to achieve the vision of a world where biology and technology work seamlessly to transform health and health- care for everyone. When Zandstra joined UBC in 2017, he founded BC's first and only School of Biomedical Engineer- ing (SBME@UBC) and set to work building a world- leading hub for cutting-edge biomedical engineering education, innovation and research to help bring new treatments to patients faster. "British Columbia's burgeoning biotech sector has leaped onto the world stage," says Zandstra, director of SBME@UBC. "It's an ecosystem where people, technologies, facilities and stakeholders from hospitals, universities and industry are coming together like never before. SBME@UBC is becom- ing the community home for this ecosystem and the place where the next generation of talent and technologies will emerge." Among the top stem cell researchers in Canada, Zandstra and his team pioneered the field of stem cell bioengineering, the scientific foundation to many emerging cellular therapies. By applying engineering principles to stem cell biology, Zandstra's team develops cell-based therapies for leukemia and other blood diseases. In less than five years at UBC, Zandstra has successfully brought together more than 80 faculty to form a talented and diverse community of teach- ing, research and clinical expertise to develop new ways to manage and treat long-standing medical challenges such as Alzheimer's disease, cancer, diabetes, heart disease and spinal cord injury. These bioengineers work across biological scales— from molecular and cellular engineering to human systems physiology—to build interdisciplinary, tailor-made solutions to medical problems that previously could not be addressed using conventional approaches. Zandstra's next priority: to build a state-of-the- art, purpose-designed home for SBME@UBC. "Innovation only happens when we collaborate," says Zandstra. "It requires bringing together the full breadth of our knowledge, technology and talent under one roof. Imagine a living lab—a fully creative environment without technological, scientific or academic boundary." With construction scheduled to start next year and the grand opening only two years away, philanthropic support is urgently needed to make this building a reality. Community leaders like you have the oppor- tunity to name spaces ranging from the building itself to the atrium, lecture theatres, teaching labs, design studios and core research facilities in the new building. Your donation to UBC will directly support the construction of the new building for SBME@UBC— a launchpad for medical innovation that will trans- form healthcare and the economy of the future. This is your chance to put your name on the future of medical innovation in British Columbia. ■ PLEASE MAKE A GIFT TODAY. To help change the future of medicine, please con- tact Violetta Yan, associate director of development, at 604-822-8079 or violetta.yan@ubc.ca. ■ PETER ZANDSTRA WANTS TO CHANGE THE FUTURE OF MEDICINE C R E AT E D BY BCBusiness I N PA RT N E RS H I P W IT H THE UNIVERSITY OF BRITISH COLUMBIA You can help him make it happen CONNECT: FACEBOOK: @ubcbme TWITTER: @sbme_ubc INSTAGRAM: @ubcsbme WEBSITE: bme.ubc.ca

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