| Published June 21, 2011 |
Volume
19, Number 6
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i-GATE Bolsters Tri-Valley Identity as Cleantech Hub
Based in part on the principle that like attracts like, i-GATE is
reshaping the business identity of the Tri-Valley, transforming it into
a regional, green-oriented technology hub.
The acronym stands
for Innovation for Green Advanced Transportation Excellence, and the
initiative involves a unique cluster of disciplines, from energy and
biofuels to biotech and robotics. “A lot of these industries are
colliding, creating new energy, literally and figuratively,” comments
Rob White, the Economic Development Director for the City of Livermore,
who also serves as the i-GATE Innovation Hub Coordinator.
As
White explains, “i-GATE is an umbrella term for numerous
activities.” Its most obvious component is the incubator, NEST
(National Energy Systems Technology), whose mission is to provide the
physical space and business services to support start-ups that focus on
clean technology innovations in the energy and transportation sectors.
Key collaborators are the City of Livermore, Sandia National
Laboratories, and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. It also
represents a broad regional partnership with Dublin, Pleasanton, San
Ramon, Danville, Fremont, Lathrop, Tracy, and West Sacramento.
Although
these municipalities are not all contiguous, they are working together
on the shared goal of fostering innovation in cleantech-related
business sectors. “What makes this different from every other regional
effort is that the municipalities realize their power lies in creating
an environment appropriate for driving innovation. You can’t build a
business park like Hacienda in a jurisdiction that doesn’t want it,”
White points out.
When the region operates as a unified whole,
the collective results are far greater than the sum of the parts.
“Every jurisdiction has realized that, instead of fighting each other
for a piece of the pie, if they collaborate using all their resources
they can build a pie factory,” he continues. “Then there will be plenty
to go around for everyone.”
The emphasis on
collaboration creates a much more extensive sphere of influence that
reaches deep into the strengths of the region.
“Our valley
represents one of the largest clusters of brainpower in the nation,”
White comments. This constellation of “super-educated, highly
intelligent” people is not just a boon to economic development. It is
also a prime driver behind the entire span of amenities that contribute
to the high quality of life here, which in turn attracts even more
entrepreneurial executives. “You can’t discount the social part of
this,” he notes.
i-GATE is already bearing fruit. In the last
15 months, the Tri-Valley has seen the addition of over 1,000 new or
arriving manufacturing jobs, all in the cleantech sector, White
reports. “In a down economy, to add that number of manufacturing jobs
in a region is huge.”
There has been growth and change within
Hacienda as well. “The business park, known especially for professional
services, large medical groups, and software companies, is now starting
to acquire a new identity housing small start-ups,” he observes.
“Focusing on the i-GATE hub helps promote the area to businesses that
might not have been aware of the ecosystem of innovation. This is one
more mechanism to boost awareness. Remember, with a rising tide, all
boats float.”
For more information, visit www.igateihub.org.
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