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Technology in Virginia

Carilion’s first biotech sale

Virginia Business
September 2004

The creation of the Carilion Biomedical Institute in Roanoke five years ago was supposed to mark a new era of biotech growth in western and Southwest Virginia. Now the institute can claim some success with the sale of the first company it helped launch. The assets of Charlottesville-based Biophile Inc., an eight-employee company that makes laboratory freezers developed by University of Virginia scientists, were bought in June by Massachusetts-based TekCel Inc., a lab equipment company.

Institute leaders say the sale is proof they can get a concept out of a university lab and into the private sector. But since Biophile’s launch in 2001 the institute has put $10 million into the company, and it’s not clear if they recouped that investment. Terms of the deal were kept secret at the buyer’s request, says institute President and CEO Daniel Barchi, who was Biophile’s CEO prior to the sale. The institute was a co-owner of Biophile, along with Carilion Health System, the Virginia Tech Foundation and the University of Virginia Patent Foundation.

TekCel says it plans on keeping Biophile in Charlottesville. “We’re thrilled that for $10 million we were able to start a major capital company, build it up, create all those jobs, generate $2.5 million in revenue (in 2003) and then sell it to a major player. If that’s not good, I don’t know what is,” says Barchi.

Return to Virginia Business - September 2004