4MLK Opens as Hub of Innovation and Community
January 21, 2025 Lorri AngellozThe BioPark’s newest facility, which provides advanced labs and community gathering spaces, officially opened Jan. 15.
Photo: UMB President Bruce E. Jarrell
“We’ve set the table for Baltimore’s future,” University of Maryland, Baltimore (UMB) President Bruce Jarrell, MD, FACS, said at the Jan. 15 grand opening of 4MLK, the newest addition to the University of Maryland BioPark. Jarrell was welcoming guests including Maryland Lt. Gov. Aruna Miller, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, University leaders, community members, and other partners who have made 4MLK a reality and helped shape the BioPark’s growth over the past two decades.
“I think of this as a table,” Jarrell continued, describing how community stakeholders, private companies, and government agencies have come together to create a hub of innovation in West Baltimore. “And this BioPark is a good example of another plate at the table to help make Baltimore great.”
Jarrell hailed the project as “a spectacular transformation” of the surrounding corridor and credited Wexford Science & Technology, the building’s developer, for taking a chance on Baltimore. “It took trust from the Wexford & Science Technology company, our BioPark development company, to believe that this could happen in West Baltimore,” Jarrell said.
Wexford Science & Technology, now headquartered at 4MLK, has built similar projects across the country. But for chief executive officer Ted Russell, 4MLK is especially meaningful. “Though Wexford is now known as a national development company, our roots are based here in Baltimore, and they run deep — specifically for myself, born and raised here in Baltimore City, which is why 4MLK is so important to us and to me,” he said.
Located at the intersection of Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and West Baltimore Street, the eight-story, 250,000-square-foot 4MLK was designed to stand as a center of community engagement in addition to research and entrepreneurship. That role is evident even in the facility’s name. As noted during the ribbon-cutting ceremony, the development team hoped to give the building the address “1 MLK.” When its location on the even-numbered side of the street made that impossible, they instead chose “4MLK” — intended to mean “for everybody” — highlighting its inclusive purpose for innovators and residents alike.
Russell explained that the new facility brings Wexford’s “Knowledge Community” model to life, noting, “4MLK not only represents a new statement project for Wexford, but the opportunity to create a new gateway here to the BioPark that demonstrates the most forward-thinking components of design, collaboration, innovation, and community engagement.”
In addition to flexible lab spaces called Connect Labs by Wexford, designed for startups and established companies alike, amenities at 4MLK include a civic lounge to foster gatherings that welcome neighbors as well as scientists.
Baltimore’s mayor also underlined 4MLK’s community-first spirit. “The civic lounge, flexible land space, and public plaza demonstrate that this building isn’t just for researchers and entrepreneurs, it’s a place for connection, creativity, and community,” Scott said, emphasizing the inclusion of common areas and programming that invite local residents to enjoy the space. “It’s going to continue to build Baltimore’s reputation as a destination for the very best minds in our country to come and resource work and fall in love with not just crab cakes, but everything that is Charm City.”