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Technology Clusters

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Technology based economic development is a target objective ... Siemens/Newport News fabricates more than 50,000 automotive fuel injectors per day ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Technology Clusters


1
  • Technology Clusters
  • A Model for Expanding Collaborative RD
  • H. Lee Beach, Jr.
  • December 3, 2007

2
Hampton Roads, VA
  • 16 diverse cities and counties in the southeast
    corner of the state population of 1.6 million.
  • Economic issues are well documented regional
    emphasis has been directed at
  • Increasing per-capita income
  • Increasing diversification/decreasing reliance on
    military
  • Stopping out-migration
  • Technology based economic development is a target
    objective

3
Hampton Roads Research Partnership (HRRP)
  • Created to facilitate the enhancement of
    technology based economic development
  • Goals
  • Research collaboration among members
  • Building bridges to the business and economic
    development communities
  • Promoting collective capabilities of the region
  • Concept
  • Leverage assets to enhance competitiveness and
    take advantage of unique co-location of two
    national laboratories
  • Combine and build expertise in selected focus
    areas

4
HRRP Membership
  • Christopher Newport University
  • College of William and Mary
  • Eastern Virginia Medical School
  • Hampton University
  • Norfolk State University
  • Old Dominion University
  • Virginia Wesleyan College
  • Jefferson Lab
  • NASA Langley Research Center
  • National Institute of Aerospace (NIA)
  • JFCOM

5
Current Operational Model
  • Funding from US Dept. of Commerce Economic
    Development Administration (EDA) University
    Center Program and HRRP Members
  • Primary focus is university-business
    relationships facilitated through Technology
    Clusters
  • Activities are accomplished through Cluster
    Groups.
  • Clusters are led by universities, who provide a
    Cluster Leader.
  • Technology Clusters become Economic Clusters

6
Cluster Concept
Small Companies
Prime Contractors
Events
Cluster Group
Collaborations
Application Areas
HRRP
NSU
CWM
ODU
JLab
CNU
LaRC
JFCOM
HU
NIA
EVMS
7
Modeling Simulation ClusterBuilding on Success
Medical
MS ODU Lead 150 Companies
Military
Homeland Security
Transportation
Education/ Serious Gaming
8
MS Cluster Building on Success
  • Primary current customer US Joint forces Command
    and other military, building since mid 1990s.
  • 2004 Economic Impact Study
  • 4000 jobs supporting military applications,
    growing at 12
  • Average salary nearly double the region average
  • 430 million annually to Hampton Roads Economy
  • Opportunity to substantially strengthen the
    overall economic impact with proper emphasis
  • Both public and private sectors have made strong
    commitments
  • Key role of Governor 17 new faculty positions
    and supporting economic development funding
  • EMTASC consortium 15 companies and ODU

9
MS Cluster Activities
  • Aggressive extension into 4 new application areas
  • Military, Homeland Security, Transportation,
    Medical, Education/Serious Gaming
  • Facilitating small business incubation
  • 3 spin off businesses to date
  • Promoting regional recognition as an
    international leader in MS
  • MS Summits in 2006 and 2007
  • Conferences (eg, ModSim World 2007, Sept 13-15)
  • Representation of region to national and
    international companies and organizations
  • Developing workforce capabilities K-12 through
    Ph.D

10
Virtual Operating Room
11
Sensors Cluster
Military/ Homeland Security
Medical
Sensors CWM Lead 50 Companies
Marine Science
Manufacturing/ Machine Health
Aerospace
12
Sensors Cluster Activities
  • Targeted efforts to bring specific companies and
    universities/labs together
  • Technical Assistance
  • Tech transfer/commercialization
  • Partnering/commercialization
  • Larger efforts designed to broadly promote
    regional collaboration, or to promote the region
    nationally and internationally
  • Events (Symposia, Conferences, etc.)
  • Infrastructure improvements (Enabling/unique
    assets, new databases, etc).
  • Major Collaborative Ventures (New Centers of
    Excellence, formal industry/university consortia,
    companies, etc.)

13
Autonomous Underwater Vehicle
14
(New) Bioscience Cluster
???
Defense/ Homeland Security
Cancer
Bioscience EVMS Lead Economic Study Pending
Womens/ Pediatric Health
Diabetes/Aging
Marine/ Environmental Science
15
DNA and Protein Arraysfor Disease Biomarkers
16
Critical Success Factors for Sustained Growth
  • Universities strong commitment to economic
    development
  • Must come from the top
  • Incentives for and nurturing of entrepreneurial
    faculty
  • State and Communities commitment to cluster
    support
  • Critical to maintaining momentum
  • Must be comparable to MS in new areas
  • Better use of unique infrastructure to create
    critical mass
  • Aggressive marketing

17
Partnership with Other Organizations
  • HRRP Member business assistance groups
  • Regional/state organizations
  • Hampton Roads Partnership (HRP)
  • Hampton Roads Technology Council (HRTC)
  • Hampton Roads Technology Incubator (HRTI)
  • Hampton Roads Economic Development Alliance
    (HREDA)
  • Hampton Roads Planning District Commission
    (HRPDC)
  • VA Center for Innovative Technology (CIT)

18
Lessons Learned
  • Cluster building (in our context) is a contact
    sport
  • Cultural differences between industry and
    universities must be overcome
  • Intellectual property
  • Metrics
  • Must create win-win scenarios

19
BACKUPCHARTS
20
Technical Assistance Success Story Siemens
  • Siemens/Newport News fabricates more than 50,000
    automotive fuel injectors per day
  • Project goal was substantial improvement (speed,
    quality) in micro-machining of holes by use of
    lasers instead of mechanical devices
  • In 2000, three co-located universities supported
    Siemens in a research laser laboratory setup in
    the Applied Research Center 280K to
    universities augmented 1.2M.
  • Excellent example of university/industry
    collaboration
  • Nine invention disclosures
  • Laser moved from research lab to prototype lab at
    company site in 2003
  • Laser began production use in 2004

21
Laser Micro Machining
22
Tech Transfer/Commercialization Success Story
Dilon Technologies
  • Dilon began as a 3-way collaboration between
    Virginia Center for Innovative Technology, the
    University of Virginia and the Department of
    Energys Thomas Jefferson Lab National
    Accelerator Facility (JLAB), located in Newport
    News, Virginia.
  • Brought innovative medical imaging technologies
    to market based on scientific research conducted
    at Jefferson Lab.
  • Received private investment in 2003 to launch
    marketing and sales and recently received
    significant equity investment in spring of 2006.

23
Breast-Specific Gamma Imaging (BSGI) with the
Dilon 6800 Gamma Camera
  • Nuclear breast imaging technique that
  • captures vital tumor information by viewing
  • the metabolic activity of cancerous lesions in
  • the breast not available from other imaging
  • modalities.
  • Ideal diagnostic complement to
  • mammography for the early detection of
  • breast cancer
  • High-resolution, small field-of-view.
  • Portable, compact design, allowing for same- day
    evaluation at the point of care .
  • High sensitivity (96) for identifying earlier
    stage cancers.
  • Ability to differentiate benign from malignant
    masses in excess of 96.

24
Partnership/Commercialization Success Story
EVMS/WM/Incogen
  • Research Partnership activity led to a
    multi-year, multi-faceted partnering between two
    universities and a bioinformatics company in the
    area of proteomics (use of mass spectrostrophy in
    study of cell proteins with application to cancer
    diagnostics)
  • VA Center for Innovative Technology (CIT) award
    to develop software
  • NIH/NCI SBIR Phase I and II to continue software
    product resulted
  • NIH award to increase detection sensitivity

25
Partnership/Commercialization Success Story New
Opportunities
  • EVMS/WM/Incogen collaboration led to
  • New applications for the technology
  • FBI contract for anthrax spore detection
  • DHS contract for biological threat
    characterization
  • New technology areas
  • Cancer research (onset, diagnostics, spread and
    treatment using laser light)
  • New collaborations/partners
  • Jefferson Lab, UVA, Harvard, Bionetics, ...
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