May 18, 2024

milestone

Milestone Senior Expert services launches fundraising campaign for creating renovations in Kalamazoo

KALAMAZOO, MI — Milestone Senior Companies declared a “New Home, New Hope” fundraising marketing campaign Thursday to elevate $3 million to help renovations at their facility on 918 Jasper St.

“This campaign will assist us to proceed to assist the perform we do and provide expert services to all our group members,” Richard Klein, president and CEO of Milestone Senior Products and services, claimed at a push meeting Thursday, Could 19. “If individuals do not know who we are and what we do, they just can't access our companies.”

Milestone Senior Solutions supports seniors and individuals with disabilities in their homes so they have preference about remaining in their residences or shifting to an assisted dwelling facility. The organization serves inhabitants in Allegan, Branch, Barry, Calhoun, Kalamazoo, St. Joseph and Van Buren counties.

“We can definitely see 1st hand the impression we have on individuals we provide,” Klein claimed. “You can see that isolated senior’s deal with light up when they see a acquainted deal with, that driver which is there two, three, four times a week. When you see the impact you have with the selections persons have to make in between food items or medication or feeding their pet for instance or on their own, we can make a huge variance there.”

Donations will go toward fixing flooding difficulties in the developing, replacing the HVAC system and purchasing new kitchen area machines. $1.5 million has been elevated from donors right before saying the marketing campaign to the community.

The concept for a campaign blossomed right after Cassandra Boyd, the organization’s fund improvement director, arrived at out to the Irvin S. Gilmore Basis for assistance in updating their making.

“We begun off with a feasibility research that we did, we interviewed more than 33 community associates and from that we went to our board and they accepted that we could get heading on a cash campaign,” Boyd mentioned.

The marketing campaign finances is separated into 4 classes: $2.25 million for typical making renovations, fixtures and furnishings $460,000 for mechanical updates for effectiveness and $160,000 for flood mitigation. The remaining $125,000 will go towards campaign bills.

Boyd is optimistic Milestone Senior Products and services will surpass the fundraising intention.

“I’m speaking that into the universe,” Boyd reported. “I am really hopeful that we will surpass that purpose when people today certainly come across out what we do and how we provide our neighborhood. We just can't ignore our seniors.”

Sheri Welsh, a single of the campaign cabinet customers, claimed she feels Kalamazoo has a ‘magic’ that will convey persons jointly to guidance Milestone Senior Services.

“People truly treatment deeply about having care of the people that dwell listed here so persons are generous not only with their finances but with their time and talent,” Welsh said. “We didn’t get compensated to do any of this type of stuff, we did it since it is the proper point to do. We want to choose care of our community.”

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TMC3 Collaborative Building, at 250,000 square-feet and 6 stories high, hits construction milestone

For the first 18 months of the pandemic, Bill McKeon, the CEO of Texas Medical Center, woke up at 3 a.m. every day to review the latest hospital data on coronavirus cases before hosting 7 a.m. meetings with the heads of the major Texas Medical Center hospitals and 8 a.m. meetings with government officials to discuss the data.

The rest of his days were an onslaught of tasks as he helped manage the response to the biggest health crisis in a century.

But even through all of that, McKeon and Texas Medical Center institutions kept working in the background on TMC3, an ambitious 37-acre biomedical research campus planned before the pandemic. Looking at architectural plans and hosting Zoom meetings about the project offered a respite during the some of the worst moments of the pandemic, he said.

“It was frankly the thing that kept us most sane at the time,” McKeon said. “It allowed us to look toward the future beyond this pandemic.”

People take a tour of the TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

People take a tour of the TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

Godofredo A. Vásquez, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer

The first pieces of the potentially game-changing biomedical research campus are now starting to come to fruition just outside the Texas Medical Center, along Old Spanish Trail about five miles south of downtown Houston.

Contractors with Vaughn Construction topped out this week on the first building in the project, meaning the six-story building has reached its highest point. The 250,000 square-foot Collaborative Building represents the first piece in a broader 6 million square-foot mixed-use development.

TMC3 is expected to help solidify Houston’s reputation as a major life science hub by bringing together medical entrepreneurs with leading biopharmaceutical and health care companies, as well as academics, researchers and health professionals. The project leverages the activity in the already bustling Texas Medical Center, which is often described as the world's largest medical complex spanning more than 50 million square feet of space.

The TMC3 project’s founding institutions include Texas Medical Center (TMC), Texas A&M University Health Science Center, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) and The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.

After years of planning and construction, the first few buildings and public parks in the project are expected to open next year.

The first floor of the Collaborative Building will be open to the public with a 7,000 square-foot atrium featuring natural light spilling into a stadium-style seating space capable of hosting events such as lectures for up to 500 people.

People take a tour of the TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

People take a tour of the TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

Godofredo A. Vásquez, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer

The second floor will house wet and dry labs for researchers working with MD Anderson, Texas A&M Health and UT Health Houston. The third floor includes space for yet-to-be-announced private industry partners.

The fourth floor will host offices for TMC's data and clinical research collaborative programs, the TMC Venture Fund, which invests in life sciences startups, the hedge fund Braidwell, and other venture and equity fund partners.

Historically, TMC was comprised of institutions siloed in buildings that were “designed to be separate rather than collaborative,” McKeon said. This new Collaborative Building is meant to bring together healthcare, educational and private industry leaders under one roof to mingle and develop new concepts.

“It’s going to be the clearinghouse for the free exchange of ideas that doesn’t happen today,” McKeon said.

Across from the Collaborative Building, work is progressing on the first few levels of what eventually is expected to be 700,000 square-feet spread across two connected buildings dedicated to additional industry partners and educational research space.

The TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, seen on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

The TMC3 Collaborative Building, a 250,000 square-foot joint research building located in the heart of the TMC3 life science campus, seen on Tuesday, March 22, 2022, in Houston.

Godofredo A. Vásquez, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer

The buildings in the project will curve to wrap around six public parks linked together in the shape of double helix in designs by Elkus Manfredi Architects and landscape architect Mikyoung Kim Design, both of Boston.

By the end of this year, Majestic Realty — a California real estate firm partnering with TMC —is expected to break ground on a 521-room hotel and a 350-unit residential project, McKeon said. The Houston real estate firm Transwestern is working with TMC to develop the campus, which is expected to get an additional six industry and research buildings.

“Houston already has a place on the world stage as a leader in clinical care and life sciences,” said Mayor Sylvester Turner in a statement. “With the launch of the TMC3 Collaborative Building and larger TMC3 campus, we showcase why our city leads in the areas of innovation and technology.”

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