| By WALKER MEADE CorrespondentHerald Tribune
 
 There is no better evidence of the great change in our attitude   toward breast cancer than the pink-ribboned bumper stickers that we see   all over town: "Save the Ta-ta's."
 A decade ago,   lightheartedness about such a serious subject would not have been   possible. A breast cancer diagnosis then was experienced as a death   sentence. Now, medicine has achieved a five-year survival rate of close   to 90 percent for those diagnosed with stage one cancer, and the  support  system for those suffering from cancer is vast. An organization  in  Southwest Florida that has been dedicated since 1996 to helping  women  get healthy again is The Wellness Community Southwest Florida,  now  called The Cancer Support Community Florida Suncoast after merging  with  Gilda's Club last summer. Its mission is "to help people affected  by  cancer enhance their health and well-being through participation in a   professional program of support, education and hope."
 The organization recently moved from its longtime home on Clark Road in Sarasota to a new facility on Communications Parkway in Lakewood Ranch and hired Sarasota businessman Carl Ritter as its CEO. The five-acre   campus, surrounded by more than two acres of gardens bordering a   600-acre nature preserve, is the result of a multi-faceted   collaboration. Early on, the center established relationships with New   College of Florida, Florida State University's College of Medicine in   Sarasota and Ringling College of Art and Design. In the fall of 2006,   six upper-level Ringling students collaborated on an assignment to   address the project's design concept: illustrating the transforming   power of connection and choice. |  | 
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              Topics:
                
                    green,
                
                    architecture,
                
                    usgbc,
                
                    lakewood ranch,
                
                    wellness,
                
                    cancer,
                
                    LEED,
                
                    healthy building