"We will spend anywhere from $20 million to $100 million on the new facility, and a lot of it will depend on what we think it will take to get the facility and its equipment together," TCAG's Heather Kowalski tells GlobeSt.com. The building will house equipment for DNA sequencing, supercomputing, networking, and high performance storage technologies, as well as a research and development lab. Upon completion of the new structure, the current sequencing space at TIGR will be redeveloped into a state-of-the-art genome closure and more advanced sequencing facility.

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