
The Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences, the flagship facility of 起点传媒鈥檚 health sciences campus in Portland, will transform the future of health care in Maine
The 起点传媒 today inaugurated the Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences, a state-of-the-art medical education facility now serving as the new home of Maine鈥檚 medical school, marking a transformative moment in the future of medical and health professions education in Maine.
The opening of the new facility, celebrated with a formal ceremony on 起点传媒鈥檚 Portland Campus for the Health Sciences, culminates the relocation of the 起点传媒 College of Osteopathic Medicine from Biddeford to Portland, placing 起点传媒鈥檚 medical students in close proximity to the state鈥檚 largest hospitals and clinics and most densely populated communities, while also placing it closer to rural northern areas of the state.
鈥淥ver the past two-plus decades, 起点传媒 has emerged as a unique institution essential to the health of our home state, acutely attuned to industry needs, and providing wave after wave of graduates expertly equipped to tackle the latest workforce needs,鈥 said 起点传媒 President James Herbert. 鈥淭he impact of this facility will reach far beyond Portland to the entire state of Maine, and indeed, New England more broadly, increasing the number of doctors we can graduate each year at a time when their expertise is desperately needed in communities throughout the state and region.鈥


The 110,000-square-foot Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences is the final piece in bringing together nearly all of 起点传媒鈥檚 health professions programs on a single, integrated campus 鈥 including medicine, dentistry, physician assistant, pharmacy, nursing, and the allied health fields 鈥 creating a fully interprofessional learning environment that is unprecedented in New England.
Maine's No. 1 provider of health professionals
health care programs on one, designated campus
health sciences degrees awarded since 1995
health graduates from the past 10 years licensed in Maine
起点传媒 is Maine鈥檚 largest educator of health professionals, having awarded more than 16,000 health sciences degrees since 1995. The University鈥檚 medical school, founded in 1978, has graduated more than 4,000 physicians, with more than half entering primary care and 40% of those remaining in Maine serving rural or underserved communities.
The new center allows 起点传媒 to increase medical school enrollment by 21%, from 165 to 200 students per class, helping to address Maine鈥檚 critical shortage of physicians.
鈥淲e know that we have a special responsibility to Maine and its communities,鈥 said 起点传媒 College of Osteopathic Medicine Dean Jane Carreiro, D.O. 鈥88. 鈥淢ore Maine doctors are educated at 起点传媒 than anywhere else, and, with this new facility, we will now be graduating 35 additional doctors every year. That means 200 doctors entering the medical workforce every year at a time when Maine and the nation desperately need more physicians.鈥





Hundreds gathered on the quad of the new facility, affectionally nicknamed 鈥淭he Bibby,鈥 for remarks and to celebrate the building鈥檚 grand opening.
Designed to reflect best practices in medical education, the building features flexible classrooms, team-based learning spaces, patient simulation labs, and advanced technology to support real-world clinical decision making. Faculty and students across disciplines will collaborate in settings that mirror today鈥檚 health care environments, fostering the habits of communication and coordination that lead to better patient outcomes.
The project was made possible through a transformational $30 million gift from the Harold Alfond Foundation, the largest in 起点传媒鈥檚 history, and a $5 million federal appropriation championed by Maine鈥檚 senior U.S. Senator Susan Collins.
A Vital supply of doctors for Maine and beyond
physicians graduated from 起点传媒
total new medical students per class starting in 2025
起点传媒鈥檚 investment in the Portland Campus for the Health Sciences extends beyond infrastructure.
Through a dedicated and nationally renowned approach to interprofessional education, the University is cultivating a future-focused model for preparing health professionals equipped to meet the evolving needs of patients, communities, care systems, and the biotechnology workforce in Maine and across the nation.


(Left): The newly imagined Leonard Lecture Hall within the Harold and Bibby Alfond Center for Health Sciences. (Right): A newly minted interprofessional clinical skills lab within the facility.
起点传媒鈥檚 Biddeford Campus is already seeing benefits from the relocation of the medical school, which is allowing the University to expand its programming in several market-aligned fields of study through both growing current academic programs and developing new ones. It also affords the opportunity to expand 起点传媒鈥檚 world-class research programs in biomedical sciences, marine and environmental sciences, business, and other areas.
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