Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Neely Nuclear Research Center

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Atlanta, Georgia, USA

Floor count
  
1

Floors
  
1

Demolished
  
2000

Completed
  
1963

Opened
  
1963

Phone
  
+1 404-894-2000

Neely Nuclear Research Center

Former names
  
Neely Research Reactor Georgia Tech Research Reactor

Current tenants
  
Nuclear and Radiological Engineering Program Georgia Tech Research Institute

Address
  
900 Atlantic Dr NW, Atlanta, GA 30318, USA

Owner
  
Georgia Institute of Technology

Similar
  
Brittain Dining Hall, Russ Chandler Stadium, Clough Undergraduate Learning, Antico Pizza, Georgia Tech Campus

The Frank H. Neely Nuclear Research Center, also known as the Neely Research Reactor and the Georgia Tech Research Reactor was a nuclear engineering research center on the Georgia Institute of Technology campus, which had a live, 5 kilowatt heavy-water-cooled research reactor from 1961 until 1996. It was decommissioned in November 1999. The building that housed the reactor was demolished to make way for the Marcus Nanotechnology Research Center.

The center is named for Frank H. Neely, a Georgia Tech graduate and businessman who organized the first Georgia Nuclear Advisory Commission, an essential step in the creation of the reactor and associated facilities.

History

The center and associated reactor was built after campus president Blake R. Van Leer appointed a Nuclear Science Committee, which included Georgia Tech Research Institute director James E. Boyd.

The committee recommended the creation of a Radioisotopes Laboratory Facility and a large research reactor. The laboratory was built and dedicated on January 7, 1959, and could receive, store, and process radioactive materials. The research reactor would be completed in 1963.

The reactor was shut down in 1988 due to safety concerns, and was defueled due to safety concerns related to the nearby 1996 Summer Olympics events.

The reactor building was torn down after the decommissioning, with the remainder removed as of 2015.

References

Neely Nuclear Research Center Wikipedia