Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre Moves a Step Closer
• Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre in Renfrewshire, Scotland, has topped out.
• The facility is set to develop next-generation pharmaceutical manufacturing processes from early 2022.
Plans for a new Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre (MMIC) in Scotland are a step closer after the project officially ‘topped out’. The innovation centre, currently being built by Tilbury Douglas, will help solve major pharmaceutical industry challenges and accelerate access to affordable medicines.
Located in Renfrewshire, at the heart of the emerging Advanced Manufacturing Innovation District Scotland (AMIDS), the £35 million facility is set to develop next-generation pharmaceutical manufacturing processes to drive forward innovation in the medicines supply chain.
The facility has been pioneered through a public-private collaboration between technology innovation organisation, CPI, the University of Strathclyde, UK Research and Innovation, Scottish Enterprise and founding industry partners, AstraZeneca and GSK.
The centre, a two-storey steel frame construction on piled foundations, includes an office and reception area plus GMP compliant facilities. This includes four ISO 8 pharmaceutical cleanrooms with associated materials and people air locks as well as GMP compliant supporting activities including warehousing, process utilities, QC and analytical labs.
Following the topping out, internal fitout of the facility will be completed in early 2022. In the first five years of its operation, the centre is expected to support over 100 jobs, both technical and non-technical, and generate £200M investment in advanced technologies. The facility aims to become an international beacon in medicines manufacturing, driving international engagement and attracting firms that do not currently have a presence in the UK.
Dave Tudor, Managing Director of the Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre, Quality and Biologics, at CPI, said:
“The Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre will help the pharmaceutical industry to increase momentum in technology translation by creating partnerships, working with regulators and partnering with innovators. This will ultimately lead to a reduction in time to market, drive productivity, improve compliance and reduce the carbon footprint of medicines manufacturing. Ahead of the full completion of the centre in early 2022, we continue to collaborate with industry and academic partners to develop next-generation digital manufacturing technologies, bringing us closer to medicines innovation that will ultimately benefit patients.”
Cameron Stewart, Regional Director at Tilbury Douglas Construction said:
“Today marks a real construction milestone for the project and our team is looking forward to handing over the centre at full completion. We are proud to work alongside the partners involved and, along with our supply chain, we are working hard to deliver a top quality, highly technical centre which will include laboratories, ISO 8 pharmaceutical cleanrooms and GMP compliant supporting activities. We are delighted to be involved in a project that will make such a difference to the pharmaceutical industry.”
About the Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre
The Medicines Manufacturing Innovation Centre is a collaboration between CPI, the University of Strathclyde, UK Research and Innovation, Scottish Enterprise and founding industry partners, AstraZeneca and GSK.
The consortium aims to develop the medicines manufacturing processes of the future, enabling a more agile, responsive medicines supply chain through improved manufacturing processes. It will enable new and disruptive technologies to be proven at scale in a GMP environment. This will allow the rapid adoption of next-generation processes that reduce risk, cut costs and save time, enabling a healthier society and a robust UK economy.
With a collaborative innovation culture and state-of-the-art facilities, the centre will enable industry, academia, healthcare providers and regulators to work collaboratively in order to address challenges and maximise technology opportunities within the medicines supply chain.
The initial focus of the centre will be to deliver two ‘Grand Challenges’, with the first, in collaboration with CMAC University of Strathclyde, exploring how oral solid dosage medicines can be produced more robustly and efficiently utilising continuous direct compression. The second focuses on how these medicines can then be delivered to patients with minimal waste and maximum speed, using Just in Time manufacture and supply capabilities.