Tag: incubator

Working Group Tackles Incubator Challenge

On Tuesday, September 7, we met with CleanTech industry leaders, real estate professionals, and architects at the Institute for Human Centered Design to discuss the development of a CleanTech Incubator in the Innovation District.

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino called upon the BRA’s GreenTech initiative to create a cleantech incubator, following a meeting with a dozen cleantech CEOs in June.  The City of Boston Cleantech Incubator is dedicated to accelerating the development and commercialization of Cleantech technologies, fostering innovation and strengthening job creation capacity within the industry, while amplifying the profile and brand of Cleantech in Boston.

Jim Hunt, the Mayor’s Energy and Environmental Services Cabinet Chief who participated in the discussion noted that “the mission behind the incubator dovetails nicely with the city’s sustainability and economic development goals.”

Often considered a component of successful industry cluster development strategies, incubators provide space for start-ups to grow, thrive, prototype, and perfect product and service designs by offering low cost (in some cases free) space in combination with a mix of additional features including access to professional services, lab space, or funding.  Harder to quantify, but often linked with incubators, are the opportunities and environment they provide for creative interaction and cross pollination between occupants and even across disciplines.  Incubator sponsors (governmental, academic, private sector) are motivated by the potential for industry specific localized economic development, or “clustering” (incubator “graduates” become attached and find space nearby), branding, and, in some cases equity.

Galen Nelson, Greentech Business Manager at the BRA, who has been tasked with spearheading development of the incubator, added “the Boston cleantech incubator will be part of a growing network of similar incubators state wide and complement an array of policy and program initiatives at the City level that boost market conditions for cleantech company growth.”

Tuesday’s discussion focused on the competitive advantages incubators offer cleantech startup companies, incubator management, function and ancillary service options, and possible strategic partnerships and funding opportunities.  The group also struggled with the potential breadth of a cleantech incubator acknowledging that the industry has several diverse sectors, anchored by clean energy, that draw on multiple disciplines and require an array of facilities, equipment, and space configurations.

Participants included:

Dave Bergeron – T3 Advisors

Chris Bevacqua – General Electric

Jim Bowen – Massachusetts Clean Energy Center

Eric Graham – Fraunhofer Institute Center for Sustainable Energy

Brent Larlee – Waihaka Strategies

Michael LeBlanc – Utile, Inc.

Jhana Senxian – Sustainability Guild

Matthew Silver – IntAct Labs

David Silverman – map-lab,Inc.

Deb Stevens – Stevens Group

Steve Taub – General Electric

BRA/City Staff

Jim Hunt, Chief, Energy and Environmental Services, City of Boston

Galen Nelson, GreenTech Business Manager, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Lisa Hemmerle, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Samantha Hammar, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Dr. Hans-Peter Meister, Wilson Rickerson, and Neil Veilleux of Meister Consulting Group generously provided moderation services to the group.

Over the next 3 months, the group will reach consensus on a vision for the incubator and begin to seek strategic partners and funders.

Please stay tuned and contact Galen Nelson if you want to get involved. For more on the BRA’s GreenTech Initiative, visit GreenTech Boston.

This post was syndicated from GreenTech Boston.

Check back frequently for the most up-to-date news on all things @idboston. To continue the conversation on this post or any other post, we’re on Twitter at @idboston.

On Tuesday, September 7, we met with CleanTech industry leaders, real estate professionals, and architects at the Institute for Human Centered Design to discuss the development of a CleanTech Incubator in the Innovation District.

Brent Larlee discusses incubator branding

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino called upon the BRA’s GreenTech initiative to create a cleantech incubator, following a meeting with a dozen cleantech CEOs in June.  The City of Boston Cleantech Incubator is dedicated to accelerating the development and commercialization of Cleantech technologies, fostering innovation and strengthening job creation capacity within the industry, while amplifying the profile and brand of Cleantech in Boston.

Jim Hunt, the Mayor’s Energy and Environmental Services Cabinet Chief who participated in the discussion noted that “the mission behind the incubator dovetails nicely with the city’s sustainability and economic development goals.”

Often considered a component of successful industry cluster development strategies, incubators provide space for start-ups to grow, thrive, prototype, and perfect product and service designs by offering low cost (in some cases free) space in combination with a mix of additional features including access to professional services, lab space, or funding.  Harder to quantify, but often linked with incubators, are the opportunities and environment they provide for creative interaction and cross pollination between occupants and even across disciplines.  Incubator sponsors (governmental, academic, private sector) are motivated by the potential for industry specific localized economic development, or “clustering” (incubator “graduates” become attached and find space nearby), branding, and, in some cases equity.

Galen Nelson, Greentech Business Manager at the BRA, who has been tasked with spearheading development of the incubator, added “the Boston cleantech incubator will be part of a growing network of similar incubators state wide and complement an array of policy and program initiatives at the City level that boost market conditions for cleantech company growth.”

Tuesday’s discussion focused on the competitive advantages incubators offer cleantech startup companies, incubator management, function and ancillary service options, and possible strategic partnerships and funding opportunities.  The group also struggled with the potential breadth of a cleantech incubator acknowledging that the industry has several diverse sectors, anchored by clean energy, that draw on multiple disciplines and require an array of facilities, equipment, and space configurations.

Participants included:

Dave Bergeron – T3 Advisors

Chris Bevacqua – General Electric

Jim Bowen – Massachusetts Clean Energy Center

Eric Graham – Fraunhofer Institute Center for Sustainable Energy

Brent Larlee – Waihaka Strategies

Michael LeBlanc – Utile, Inc.

Jhana Senxian – Sustainability Guild

Matthew Silver – IntAct Labs

David Silverman – map-lab,Inc.

Deb Stevens – Stevens Group

Steve Taub – General Electric

BRA/City Staff

Jim Hunt, Chief, Energy and Environmental Services, City of Boston

Galen Nelson, GreenTech Business Manager, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Lisa Hemmerle, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Samantha Hammar, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Dr. Hans-Peter Meister, Wilson Rickerson, and Neil Veilleux of Meister Consulting Group generously provided moderation services to the group.

Over the next 3 months, the group will reach consensus on a vision for the incubator and begin to seek strategic partners and funders.  Please stay tuned and contact Galen Nelson if you want to get involved.

On Tuesday, September 7, we met with CleanTech industry leaders, real estate professionals, and architects at the Institute for Human Centered Design to discuss the development of a CleanTech Incubator in the Innovation District.

Brent Larlee discusses incubator branding

Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino called upon the BRA’s GreenTech initiative to create a cleantech incubator, following a meeting with a dozen cleantech CEOs in June.  The City of Boston Cleantech Incubator is dedicated to accelerating the development and commercialization of Cleantech technologies, fostering innovation and strengthening job creation capacity within the industry, while amplifying the profile and brand of Cleantech in Boston.

Jim Hunt, the Mayor’s Energy and Environmental Services Cabinet Chief who participated in the discussion noted that “the mission behind the incubator dovetails nicely with the city’s sustainability and economic development goals.”

Often considered a component of successful industry cluster development strategies, incubators provide space for start-ups to grow, thrive, prototype, and perfect product and service designs by offering low cost (in some cases free) space in combination with a mix of additional features including access to professional services, lab space, or funding.  Harder to quantify, but often linked with incubators, are the opportunities and environment they provide for creative interaction and cross pollination between occupants and even across disciplines.  Incubator sponsors (governmental, academic, private sector) are motivated by the potential for industry specific localized economic development, or “clustering” (incubator “graduates” become attached and find space nearby), branding, and, in some cases equity.

Galen Nelson, Greentech Business Manager at the BRA, who has been tasked with spearheading development of the incubator, added “the Boston cleantech incubator will be part of a growing network of similar incubators state wide and complement an array of policy and program initiatives at the City level that boost market conditions for cleantech company growth.”

Tuesday’s discussion focused on the competitive advantages incubators offer cleantech startup companies, incubator management, function and ancillary service options, and possible strategic partnerships and funding opportunities.  The group also struggled with the potential breadth of a cleantech incubator acknowledging that the industry has several diverse sectors, anchored by clean energy, that draw on multiple disciplines and require an array of facilities, equipment, and space configurations.

Participants included:

Dave Bergeron – T3 Advisors

Chris Bevacqua – General Electric

Jim Bowen – Massachusetts Clean Energy Center

Eric Graham – Fraunhofer Institute Center for Sustainable Energy

Brent Larlee – Waihaka Strategies

Michael LeBlanc – Utile, Inc.

Jhana Senxian – Sustainability Guild

Matthew Silver – IntAct Labs

David Silverman – map-lab,Inc.

Deb Stevens – Stevens Group

Steve Taub – General Electric

BRA/City Staff

Jim Hunt, Chief, Energy and Environmental Services, City of Boston

Galen Nelson, GreenTech Business Manager, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Lisa Hemmerle, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Samantha Hammar, Economic Initiatives, Boston Redevelopment Authority

Dr. Hans-Peter Meister, Wilson Rickerson, and Neil Veilleux of Meister Consulting Group generously provided moderation services to the group.

Over the next 3 months, the group will reach consensus on a vision for the incubator and begin to seek strategic partners and funders.  Please stay tuned and contact Galen Nelson if you want to get involved.

Sharing is Caring: Companies with Extra Space Opening Their Doors to Those in Need

While some companies have downsized their space as needed, others haven’t been able to.  Most companies are locked into long-term leases and because they have fewer employees than 18 months ago, they pay for more space than they need.  There is a silver-lining: stuck with overhead (Internet, phone, and square footage) and in need of cash, some of these firms have begun renting excess space by the desk.  By renting desks to smaller companies at low prices, existing tenants are bringing in cash and getting exposure to new ideas while giving start-ups the professional office space they are looking for.  We call this a win-win…win.

We went out to Artaic, a creative firm that currently calls the Innovation District home, and met with founder Ted Acworth to hear his thoughts on why he loves his space and can’t wait to share it.

Ted stresses that he’s not alone in the Innovation District; in fact he’s right in the ‘epicenter’ of the design community. “Our favorite companies in this area are other people who are doing cool things.” Acworth acknowledges that the firms nearby are “very technologically advanced, they are smart people, hard working, and innovative. It is a lot more fun hanging with people like that than someone who is doing pretty basic stuff.”

We couldn’t agree more…

The strategies behind the ID are right in line with Ted’s remarks–clusters help generate new ideas and allow for rapid iteration. In the Bronstein Center, Artaic’s home, there are architects who have designed labs at MIT, a nationally known web design firm, and a rapid-prototype manufacturer.  Just next-door is a company working to solve the world’s energy problems with PV technology and another focused on energy-saving retrofits for the city’s housing stock.

“It’s in the cracks between departments where some of the greatest innovation tends to be happening.” Artaic grew from one of those cracks, taking an artistic form (mosaic) that has been around for thousands of years and bringing it into the 21st century with the help of a slick software package, a tile-sorting robot, and a staff of multi-talented artists.  All of those assets together create one of our favorite buzz words in the ID…“mass customization.”

Artaic currently has some vacant space and is looking to incubate a start-up or two.  The company doesn’t have to be a design firm; remember—it’s in the cracks between departments that innovation happens.

If you’d like to sit with Ted and the fine folks at Artaic, click here.  He has some fine turn-key office space for rent at a very reasonable price.

Also, if your firm has some extra space, we know a bunch of innovators who would be happy to share it.  Just let us know!

To continue the conversation on this post or any other post, take it to twitter: @idboston.

We can’t wait to share,

~af

See more from Artaic’s opening event in Oct 2009

Video: Menino announces Cleantech incubator at the EDGE

Watch Mayor Menino announce his vision for a cleantech incubator to be located in the Innovation District.  This speech was given before Boston’s advertising and marketing leaders at the AdClub’s EDGE Conference on June 24.