Community Learning Network
  • Home
    • About
    • Circle of Support
    • Interns >
      • Fly-In Intern Program
    • CommUNITY Educators
    • Annual Update
    • Investors for Good
    • In the News
  • Learn
    • Digital Learning >
      • Make a Website
      • Blog Post basics
      • Digital Business Card
      • Digital Photo Basics
      • Digital Detectives
      • Snap Camera
      • Adobe Creative Suite
    • Learn and Use GIS >
      • ArcGIS Competition
      • GIS Careers
      • Indigenous Mapping
      • GIS NM Highlights
    • Real-Life Learning >
      • WPI Project Based Learning
      • NM Career Academy >
        • Native Career Profiles
      • Youth Ambassadors
    • Service Learning >
      • Photo Gallery
  • Connect
    • www.broadbandfornewmexico.org
    • Digital Equity in New Mexico
    • NM Homework Gap Team
    • Hotspots
    • Broadband-Spotlight
    • Connection Check
    • Connectivity Survey >
      • Survey Outreach Tips
    • Tribal Libraries
    • Digital Literacy
  • Nurture
    • Seed Advocacy
    • La Escuela del Agua
    • Native American Network
    • Indigi-Genius
    • Buena Gente
    • Love Where We Live
  • Mobilize
    • Tech
  • Gallery for Good
    • commUNITY voices
    • Crazy Hair Day Literacy Campaign
    • Global Entrepreneurship Week >
      • GEW Archive
    • History through Music
    • Human Reunion
    • Indigenous Connectivity Summit 2017
    • Interfaith Dialogue
    • Internet Society New Mexico Chapter
    • Guadalupe Project >
      • Guadalupe Improvements
      • Guadalupe Business Association
      • Guadalupe Street Reconstruction
    • Jicarilla Apache Youth FilmFest
    • LISTO for Teachers
    • Native Artists Panel
    • Film Prize Jr NM
    • Pandemic Response >
      • CommUNITY Relief
      • PPE Donations
      • Right Relations Fund
      • Spread Some Sunshine
      • ITDRC Project Connect
      • commUNITY rocks
      • Pandemic Projects Spotlight
    • SWAIA Project
    • Pueblo Connect
    • San Francisco Street Project
    • SEED: Climate Change Resilience
    • StartUp Generation
    • Storm Cloud Media >
      • AS TEMPERATURES RISE
      • MONEY & LIFE
    • TDK Learning Community
    • Walk in Beauty...Again Documentary Film
    • Water Matters >
      • ATLAS Youth Water Ambasadors
  • CLN Blog
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • Blank

CommUNITY Learning Network 
Blog

Donate
Connect

Los Alamos National Laboratory signs lease on Santa Fe office

2/10/2021

0 Comments

 
New downtown facility includes Dorothy McKibbin Conference Center
Longtime Santa Fe resident Dorothy McKibbin (1897–1985) was an unemployed single mother in 1943 when she was offered a secretarial position for an organization known only as “Project Y.” For the next 20 years, McKibbin staffed the now-legendary office, 109 East Palace, the headquarters of the once-secret Manhattan Project, where she became a liaison between Santa Fe and Los Alamos.
Picture
LOS ALAMOS, N.M., Feb. 10, 2021—Connections between Los Alamos National Laboratory and the City of Santa Fe will be strengthened with the Laboratory’s opening of a new downtown office space housing up to 75 employees and including the Dorothy McKibbin Conference Center.
The Laboratory signed a 10-year lease on a 28,000-square-foot building at the junction of N. Guadalupe and W. Alameda. The new location offers space for Laboratory meetings, events, conferences, and teleworking.
“Santa Fe has played an important role in the history of the Laboratory since our inception, and we’re delighted to have a presence in the City Different again,” said Thom Mason, Laboratory director. “This building will act as an additional entrance point for the Laboratory, just as Dorothy McKibbin’s office at 109 East Palace in Santa Fe did decades ago. I extend my gratitude to the National Nuclear Security Administration for partnering with the Laboratory to make this project happen.” The NNSA is a semi-autonomous agency within the U.S. Department of Energy that oversees the Laboratory.
In 1943, longtime Santa Fe resident Dorothy McKibbin (1897–1985) was an unemployed single mother when she was offered a secretarial position for an organization known only as “Project Y.” At $150/month, it was the best pay in town, so she took it. For the next 20 years, McKibbin staffed the now-famed office at 109 East Palace, the headquarters of the secret Manhattan Project. She became known as the Gatekeeper of Los Alamos and a liaison between the two communities. McKibbin is remembered for her optimistic outlook, skill at putting people at ease, and dedication to helping new hires and visiting collaborators get acquainted with the historic culture of Northern New Mexico.
“Even today, a great deal of the groundbreaking work we do at the Laboratory involves collaboration with partners from across the region and around the world—whether it’s on a global scientific challenge such as our COVID-19 research, or a local education program like the Regional Partnership School in Pojoaque,” said Kelly Beierschmitt, deputy director of operations. “A Santa Fe location makes the Laboratory more accessible to our partners and neighbors.”
The Santa Fe office includes the first-floor Dorothy McKibbin Conference Center plus permanent offices and co-working spaces for the Laboratory’s Community Partnerships Office, as well as some communications and government affairs functions. No hazardous work will be carried out there. The up-to-75 employees to be headquartered at the new office space are residents of Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, Bernalillo, Los Alamos, and Sandoval Counties.
At present, roughly 2,900 of the Laboratory’s 12,000 employees reside in the city and county of Santa Fe. Their salaries, much of which are spent where they reside, exceed $300 million annually. In FY 2020, the Laboratory hired more than 1,000 new employees; of those, 70 percent were New Mexico residents. The Laboratory expects to hire more than 1,000 more new employees in 2021.
“Los Alamos National Laboratory is among the largest employers in Northern New Mexico and has a huge impact on the local economy,” said Bridget Dixson, president and CEO of the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce. “The Chamber is pleased to welcome the Santa Fe office and the Laboratory employees that will become part of our business community.”
The Santa Fe location will be a hub for community and economic development activities. It will facilitate the Laboratory’s educational partnerships, workforce development initiatives, recruiting, and technology transfer. It will also give the Laboratory’s technology transfer division—the Feynman Center—access to additional meeting space in Santa Fe to foster new technology collaborations from both local and national sources.

CONTACT  
  • Tricia Ware
  • (505) 695-3026
  • Email
"Santa Fe has played an important role in the history of the Laboratory since our inception, and we’re delighted to have a presence in the City Different again."
-Thom Mason, Laboratory director
About Los Alamos National Laboratory
​
Los Alamos National Laboratory, a multidisciplinary research institution engaged in strategic science on behalf of national security, is managed by Triad, a public service oriented, national security science organization equally owned by its three founding members: Battelle Memorial Institute (Battelle), the Texas A&M University System (TAMUS), and the Regents of the University of California (UC) for the Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration.
Los Alamos enhances national security by ensuring the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons of mass destruction, and solving problems related to energy, environment, infrastructure, health, and global security concerns.
0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    Author

    CommUNITY Learning Network is a grassroots New Mexico-born and locally based 501(c)3 organization dedicated to building stronger communities through real-life learning.
    Enjoy reading up on info from our partners and projects and posts from local CommUNITY Educators, Interns, and Youth Ambassadors.
    ​
    info@community
    learningnetwork.org

    Archives

    January 2022
    December 2021
    August 2021
    April 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    November 2020
    June 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    October 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    March 2018
    December 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

    Donate
    Stay Connected
Picture
Community Learning Network
​
"building stronger communities through real-life learning"

info@communitylearningnetwork.org

505-699-1503
CLN © 2020.​All rights reserved.
  • Home
    • About
    • Circle of Support
    • Interns >
      • Fly-In Intern Program
    • CommUNITY Educators
    • Annual Update
    • Investors for Good
    • In the News
  • Learn
    • Digital Learning >
      • Make a Website
      • Blog Post basics
      • Digital Business Card
      • Digital Photo Basics
      • Digital Detectives
      • Snap Camera
      • Adobe Creative Suite
    • Learn and Use GIS >
      • ArcGIS Competition
      • GIS Careers
      • Indigenous Mapping
      • GIS NM Highlights
    • Real-Life Learning >
      • WPI Project Based Learning
      • NM Career Academy >
        • Native Career Profiles
      • Youth Ambassadors
    • Service Learning >
      • Photo Gallery
  • Connect
    • www.broadbandfornewmexico.org
    • Digital Equity in New Mexico
    • NM Homework Gap Team
    • Hotspots
    • Broadband-Spotlight
    • Connection Check
    • Connectivity Survey >
      • Survey Outreach Tips
    • Tribal Libraries
    • Digital Literacy
  • Nurture
    • Seed Advocacy
    • La Escuela del Agua
    • Native American Network
    • Indigi-Genius
    • Buena Gente
    • Love Where We Live
  • Mobilize
    • Tech
  • Gallery for Good
    • commUNITY voices
    • Crazy Hair Day Literacy Campaign
    • Global Entrepreneurship Week >
      • GEW Archive
    • History through Music
    • Human Reunion
    • Indigenous Connectivity Summit 2017
    • Interfaith Dialogue
    • Internet Society New Mexico Chapter
    • Guadalupe Project >
      • Guadalupe Improvements
      • Guadalupe Business Association
      • Guadalupe Street Reconstruction
    • Jicarilla Apache Youth FilmFest
    • LISTO for Teachers
    • Native Artists Panel
    • Film Prize Jr NM
    • Pandemic Response >
      • CommUNITY Relief
      • PPE Donations
      • Right Relations Fund
      • Spread Some Sunshine
      • ITDRC Project Connect
      • commUNITY rocks
      • Pandemic Projects Spotlight
    • SWAIA Project
    • Pueblo Connect
    • San Francisco Street Project
    • SEED: Climate Change Resilience
    • StartUp Generation
    • Storm Cloud Media >
      • AS TEMPERATURES RISE
      • MONEY & LIFE
    • TDK Learning Community
    • Walk in Beauty...Again Documentary Film
    • Water Matters >
      • ATLAS Youth Water Ambasadors
  • CLN Blog
  • Donate
  • Contact
  • Blank