KimberLee Heidmann

KimberLee’s career in the pharmaceutical and biotech space began in 1998 with her work in the Division of Mental Health and Prevention of Substance Abuse of the World Health Organization. She joined the Meeting Protocol team in 2001 and in her 20-year tenure, has served in various capacities and leadership roles. When Scout Clinical was launched in 2015, KimberLee was part of the core team of innovators who brought it to the marketplace. She presently serves as the Vice President of Patient Services overseeing the Scout worldwide operational team.

Dawn Weagle

Dawn Weagle has over 20 years of clinical development experience, gained across a variety of therapeutic areas in both local and global clinical trials. After graduating from The University of Toronto, she began her career as a study coordinator in cancer research, crossed over to pharma/biotech in 1998 as a CRA, then proceeded to study management roles in 2001.

Over the years, Dawn has been an industry CRA, Clinical Lead, Project Manager and has gained wide-ranging experience in clinical research.  Her passions are early phase oncology, hematology, immunology, pediatrics, and rare disease.  She has worked for very small to global multinational companies (both sponsor and CRO side). Dawn has an extensive understanding of the clinical development process and making teams work together productively and harmoniously.

Christina Seilern

Applying her unique style across a range of building typologies, geographies and scales she re-engages in an approach that carefully addresses each project from an in-depth consideration of the detail to the overall massing strategy. She tackles a range of projects from large-scale city masterplans, down to the more intricate scale of furniture and light fitting design, both in the emerging and developed markets.

Prior to establishing Studio Seilern Architects, Christina Seilern was the founding director of Rafael Viñoly Architects (RVA) and was responsible for key projects such as the Walkie Talkie in London, the Curve Performing Arts Centre in Leicester, Mahler 4 tower in Amsterdam, or Wageningen University Plant Research Centre in the Netherlands. SSA was established with the intent of continuing the strong design ethos developed during Christina’s time at RVA. Her diverse portfolio includes RIBA-award winning projects such as Gota House in Zimbabwe, Ansdell Street in Kensington, a world-class concert hall in the Swiss alpine village of Andermatt, awardwinning Wellington College Performing Arts Centre in Berkshire, and Boksto 6 masterplan – a UNESCO heritage site in Vilnius, Lithuania.

Christina is a frequent panellist and guest speaker both in the UK and abroad and is also a regular juror for the AR MIPIM Awards, World Architecture Festival, the RIBA EyeLine, LEAF Awards and PAD London.

Christina grew up in Switzerland and then moved to the States to study architecture at Columbia University in New York (GSAPP ’96). She is very much influenced in her work by her early years spent in the mountains, connected to nature of awe-inspiring scale. Studying and working in the States in her twenties gave her a new perspective to scale and a bold approach. She was very much touched by the buildings of Louis Kahn and Eero Saarinen who combined poetry, simplicity of details, and clarity of thought throughout the projects, something that she tries to emulate in her own work.