July 9, 2018 — Chris Munkholm has lived with every phase of building Gloucester Marine Genomics Institute’s new research institute and laboratory, from the first rendering to the ongoing construction along the Gloucester waterfront by landlord Windover Construction.
But nothing really prepared GMGI’s chief operating officer for the impressions that washed over her as she stood Friday in what will be GMGI’s conference room with views of the Jodrey State Fish Pier across the north channel.
“This is really the first time I’ve experienced it as a three-dimensional space and seen how glorious it will be to look out these windows and recognize that we are a part of America’s oldest fishing harbor,” Munkholm said. “I’m almost in tears.”
Munkholm and other GMGI executives and board members got their initial look at their new digs Friday morning in a site walk-through that presented the first tangible experience of the work space to come.
“I don’t think we could have dreamt anything better,” said Marc Vidal, one of GMGI’s founders and a member of its scientific advisory board. “It’s taken us five years to get established here, with local people starting to recognize and accept us. In the next five years, I believe that recognition will grow to a national scale. Interestingly, that would be in the year 2023, which is the 400th anniversary of the discovery of Gloucester.”