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Manufacturing

Construction firm Merit completes first phase of £66m Stevenage scheme

Merit delivered the milestone three years faster than the biotech industry standard of around five years

Merit has finished phase one of the scheme at Stevenage for Autolus Therapeutics(Image: Merit)

North East construction firm Merit has completed the first phase of a £66m advanced therapies manufacturing site in record time.

Cramlington-based Merit, an offsite engineering and construction firm which specialises in technically complex buildings, has announced the milestone at Autolus Therapeutics in Stevenage – the base for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s first purpose-built CAR-T cell manufacturing facility. Merit delivered the milestone in 17 months, three years faster than the biotech industry standard of around five years. That includes time for planning and design and only 12 months spent on site.

The firm was appointed as the main contractor to deliver the new four-storey 81,000-sqft facility for Autolus, a clinical-stage biopharmaceutical company developing next-generation T-cell therapies for cancer treatments. The new facility is part of a larger plan to create a life sciences district in Stevenage by developers Reef Group and UBS Asset Management.

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It will also add to the growth of the cell and gene cluster in the town centre, currently the third largest in the world. Phase one sees the handover of Grade C clean rooms to Autolus, enabling the firm to move into the next phase of growth.

Once completed, the facility is expected to process 2,000 treatments annually and create 400 new jobs in Stevenage. The design of the new facility uses Merit’s Flexi Pod, a hybrid solution suitable for complex high-tech facilities which features aspects of modern methods of construction for the shell and core, as well as its Pre-Assembled Modules and Pod strategy.

Merit built 75% of the high-tech building offsite at its site in Cramlington using 300 PAMs (pre assembled modules) and 15 UltraPODs totalling 900 tons before shipping them to Stevenage for installation by its specialist team. The firm’s CEO Tony Wells said the company’s solutions provided a step change in construction productivity, sustainability and time, while reducing carbon emissions and accelerating delivery times.

A CGI of the CAR-T cell manufacturing facility in Stevenage(Image: Merit)

The methods also cut capital and revenue costs and reduced external professional consultant fees.