MRIGlobal is an independent, not-for-profit, contract research organization based in Kansas City, Missouri, with regional offices in Maryland and Virginia. In addition to its own research laboratories, MRIGlobal operates research facilities for the Department of Energy and the Department of Defense. MRIGlobal addresses some of the world’s greatest threats and challenges. Founded in 1944 as an independent, not-for-profit organization, MRIGlobal performs contract research for government, industry, and academia. Customized solutions for national security and defense and health include research and development capabilities in clinical research support; infectious disease and biological threat agent detection; global biological engagement; in vitro diagnostics; and laboratory management and operations. MRIGlobal is one of two partners in the Alliance for Sustainable Energy, LLC, which manages and operates the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, for the U.S. Department of Energy. For more information, visit mriglobal.org MRIGlobal offers internal and client biological laboratory research. For decades, MRIGlobal expertise has led biosafety and biorisk management program development in the U.S. and internationally. Credentialed safety experts are at the forefront of MRIGlobal's efforts to remain compliant in its own facilities, while providing relevant, up-to-date site assessments and training around the world. "Our mission is to use science and technology for a safer, healthier, more sustainable world."
History
Foundation
Founded in 1944 during World War II as Midwest Research Institute, the organization's initial mission was to find a way to convert the ammonium nitrate military ordnance plants in Galena, Kansas, Parsons, Kansas, DeSoto, Kansas and El Dorado, Arkansas to peaceful uses of creating fertilizer. Among the nine founders was Kenneth A. Spencer who would make a fortune from the Jayhawk Plant in Galena. Spencer would be chairman of the Institute from 1954 to 1957, and donated money for the Kenneth A. Spencer Laboratories Building and the Spencer Auditorium at MRIGlobal. MRIGlobal was located initially in the former Westport, Missouri City Hall at 40th Terrace and Pennsylvania. That building was torn down in 1955 at which time MRIGlobal moved into its current Kansas City headquarters, facing the Nelson Art Gallery, and adjacent to University of Missouri - Kansas City and the headquarters of Russell Stovers candy.
Rapid expansion
MRIGlobal obtained its first contract with NASA in 1961 and its first U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency contract in 1964. In the 1970s, the organization began working for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency developing tests to detect and measure pollutants. Expansion and growth continued in the 1980s. In 1982, a venture group was created to commercialize MRIGlobal’s inventions. Major projects included engineering lightweight thermoelectric cooling devices for U.S. Army aircraft. This technology earned an R&D 100 Award, and was used in Operation Desert Storm to keep flight personnel cool while operating in warm climates. Throughout the next two decades, MRIGlobal expanded its operations, adding locations in Palm Bay, Florida, in 1999; Rockville, Maryland, in 2002; and Frederick, Maryland, in 2003. In January 2015, MRIGlobal powered their first-ever online detection database, CBRNE Tech Index.
Recent history
On March 1, 2011, the organization was renamed MRIGlobal. In 2014, MRIGlobal launched CBRNE Tech Index, a comprehensive database of Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear, and Explosive detection equipment.
Projects
Coating process for M&M Candies permitting the coating of of chocolate centers every hour
Soluble coffee for J.A. Folger a forerunner of auto drip coffeemaker
Custom designed and fabricated two Containerized Bio-Containment System units for the United States Department of State with private funding from the Paul AllenEbola Program to serve as flyable medical transport units with full biocontainment for patients with Ebola or other types of highly pathogenic organisms
Providing electricity to a remote island village in Tanzania through a 60–80 kWp PV battery-diesel hybrid minigrid