09/15/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 09/16/2025 18:33
When George Mason University opened the doors to its highly anticipated Life Sciences and Engineering Building in Manassas, Virginia, it was more than the unveiling of a new academic space-it was the beginning of a new transformative era for the university and the region.
Situated at the heart of the university's Science and Technology Campus, this state-of-the-art facility will empower students across a wide range of disciplines to explore, innovate, and push the boundaries of science and engineering.
Designed to meet the growing demand for highly specialized instructional labs, smart classrooms, and support spaces, the building is already enabling greater hands-on learning in disciplines like athletic training and kinesiology, microbiology, chemistry, engineering, forensic science, robotics and autonomous vehicles, and more.
"The Life Sciences and Engineering Building marks a major state investment in our outstanding George Mason faculty to educate and inspire our students-Virginia's next generation of inspirational leaders, researchers, innovators, and problem solvers," says George Mason President Gregory Washington.
This addition also provides increased university access for students in Prince William and Fauquier Counties, the western part of Fairfax County, the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park, and beyond, which is why the General Assembly and the Prince William County delegation, led by Delegate Luke Torian, were eager to help make this building a reality. Torian, who is chair of the Virginia House Appropriations Committee, and the delegation were instrumental in helping to secure strategic support and state funding for the building.
Encompassing 132,000 square feet of space, the building is designed to promote collaboration and engagement among students and faculty. The ground-level engineering labs and student design competition bays open directly onto the campus's exterior pathways, allowing visibility for the work happening inside.
One of the first groups to take up residence was Patriot Motorsports, a club for students who want to explore the inner workings of automotive vehicles. Over the course of the spring semester, seniors in mechanical engineering revved it up a notch with their capstone project-designing a control system for the club's Formula SAE race car.
And race cars aren't the only vehicles in the building. This new space boasts a multistory aviary lab where students can test blimps, drones, and anything else that needs extra airspace to move around. One capstone project taking advantage of the lab is an autonomous flapping wing lighter-than-air vehicle, developed by mechanical engineering Professor Daigo Shishika's students.
This spring, engineering capstone teams were also using the prototyping space on the second floor to collaborate on projects. "Once the first-floor machine shop is complete, this space will also be used for staging and constructing physical prototypes," says George Mason mechanical engineering professor Charles White.
Photo by Evan Cantwell/Office of University BrandingOne of the building's special features is the blending of laboratory and teaching spaces. All the mechanical engineering labs, including the first-floor advanced manufacturing and wind tunnel labs, contain student desks and IT lecture setups so that seminars can turn into hands-on demonstrations where students can practice in real time.
And these areas barely scratch the surface of what the building has to offer. For mechanical engineers, in addition to the wind tunnel and advanced manufacturing labs, machine shop, robotics lab, and prototype studio, there is a 3D print studio, a materials characterization lab, a sustainable energy and photonics area, and a thermofluids lab.
For civil engineers, there is a dedicated space for the American Society of Civil Engineers concrete canoe competitions. Bioengineers have access to cutting-edge studios as well, including a tissue engineering lab.
As an epicenter of innovation, creativity, and opportunity, the Science and Technology Campus plays a critical role in helping George Mason generate solutions for the world's most pressing issues. Strategically located in the technology and innovation corridor that runs from Washington, D.C., to Richmond and encompasses the George Mason ecosystem of campuses, Small Business Development Centers, and community college partnerships, the SciTech Campus is also an anchor for Prince William's growing Innovation District, which includes the development of two residential and commercial town centers directly connected to campus.
"This facility, and the advancements it will produce, further establishes the Science and Technology Campus, and this Innovation District, as an anchor of the economic corridor that runs from Mason Square in Arlington to the Fairfax Campus to here in Manassas, further entrenching George Mason as a major driver of the prosperity of our region and state," says President Washington.
The SciTech Campus opened in 1997 thanks to a university partnership with the City of Manassas and Prince William County, and it has far exceeded its initial goal of fostering groundbreaking research across disciplines. The campus is also home to the Virginia Serious Game Institute; the Biomedical Research Laboratory, one of 13 regional biocontainment laboratories established through the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; and the Forensic Science Research and Training Laboratory, one of only eight human donor forensic science labs in the United States.
In June, Governor Glenn Youngkin announced that the commonwealth will invest $2.6 million in the Innovation District.
"The planned town centers will create a stronger link between the campus and the surrounding community," says Colby Grant, BS Health, Fitness, and Recreation Resources '05, director of administration and operations for the SciTech Campus. "Combined with the new Life Sciences and Engineering Building, these developments further establish the campus as a dynamic hub for science, technology, the arts, entertainment, and recreation."
This article originally appeared in the Fall 2025 issue of the Mason Spirit.