Apparently it’s not a lab, merely a radioactive waste deposit she used during her research. It has no value and you can’t even get in because of radioactivity.
It’s supposed to be torn down to build a cancer and rare disease research center who would have a lot more value than this unsanitary building.
And even if it were a historically relevant radioactive lab, it’d still be worth replacing it by a building people can actually enter to do cancer research. If there’s any artefact that’s historically significant, it could be moved to a museum so the building can be destroyed.
Apparently it’s not a lab, merely a radioactive waste deposit she used during her research. It has no value and you can’t even get in because of radioactivity.
It’s supposed to be torn down to build a cancer and rare disease research center who would have a lot more value than this unsanitary building.
I was about to write a similar comment.
And even if it were a historically relevant radioactive lab, it’d still be worth replacing it by a building people can actually enter to do cancer research. If there’s any artefact that’s historically significant, it could be moved to a museum so the building can be destroyed.