Berkeley Lab Opens State-of-the-Art Facility for Computational Science

Wang Hall takes advantage of Lab’s hillside location for advanced energy efficiency

Written byLawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
| 4 min read
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A new center for advancing computational science and networking at research institutions and universities across the country opened today at the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab).

Named Shyh Wang Hall, the facility will house the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, or NERSC, one of the world’s leading supercomputing centers for open science which serves nearly 6,000 researchers in the U.S. and abroad. Wang Hall will also be the center of operations for DOE’s Energy Sciences Network, or ESnet, the fastest network dedicated to science, which connects tens of thousands of scientists as they collaborate on solving some of the world’s biggest scientific challenges.

Related article: Supercomputers Give Universities a Competitive Edge, Researchers Find

Complementing NERSC and ESnet in the facility will be research programs in applied mathematics and computer science, which develop new methods for advancing scientific discovery. Researchers from UC Berkeley will also share space in Wang Hall as they collaborate with Berkeley Lab staff on computer science programs.

The 149,000 square foot facility built on a hillside overlooking the UC Berkeley campus and San Francisco Bay will house one of the most energy-efficient computing centers anywhere, tapping into the region’s mild climate to cool the supercomputers at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) and eliminating the need for mechanical cooling.

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