Princeton Plasma Innovation Center Receives Funds for Early Construction Activities and Energy Conservation

A proposed image of the future Princeton Plasma Innovation Center

The Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory’s (PPPL) plans to construct a state-of-the-art building, the Princeton Plasma Innovation Center (PPIC), are moving forward. PPPL recently received permission to use $10 million in funding from Princeton University to prepare the site and received a $2.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for geothermal wells.

When it is completed in 2027, the $109.7 million PPIC project will provide new laboratory and office space at a crucial time for PPPL as the Laboratory is expanding its research mission and increasing its staff. PPIC will be the first new building in several decades and will replace two aging buildings: the Theory Wing, which has housed theoretical physicists for five decades, and part of the Administration Wing. PPPL plans to break ground on the new building as early as the summer of 2024. 

“PPIC will not only be a beautiful gateway into our national Laboratory, but it will also be a sustainable building,” said Steve Cowley, PPPL director. “Sustainability is at the heart of our mission to achieve fusion energy as a clean, safe and virtually limitless source of energy. PPIC will provide space for our fusion energy research and for research into plasma science applications in microelectronics, quantum computing, and sustainable technologies.”

Aerial view of proposed Princeton Plasma Innovation Center


A rendering of the PPIC building shows the three story north wing with the roof garden to the left, and the south wing laboratory building.