Innovation Park (Pennsylvania State University)
Innovation Park at Pennsylvania State University is a business and research park covering 118 acres (0.48 km2) in State College, Pennsylvania, adjacent to the Penn State campus near the junction of Interstate 99/U.S. Route 220 and U.S. Route 322.
Location | State College, Pennsylvania, United States |
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Address | 200 Innovation Boulevard, State College, PA 16803 |
Opening date | 1994 |
Developer | Pennsylvania State University |
Owner | Pennsylvania State University |
Size | 118 acres |
Website | innovationpark |
History
editThe university's trustees designated the area for a research park in 1989.[1] Initially known as the Penn State Research Park[2][3] and opened in 1994, its stated mission was to be the "place where collaboration between the University and private sector companies can grow,"[4] and to facilitate the transfer of University-based knowledge "to the market place and to foster economic development".[5] It was renamed Innovation Park at Penn State in July 2000.[6]
The area is the location of a number of university offices, the Penn State World Campus, a conference center, and more than 50 private companies. The production facilities of WPSU-TV and WPSU-FM moved there in 2005.[7]
References
edit- ^ Joyce Gannon, "Penn State research park targets high-tech firms", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 3, 1991.
- ^ "Business park gets boost: Innovation Park was picked as a prime site for a technology business." Archived 2012-09-04 at archive.today The Daily Collegian, September 15, 2000.
- ^ "Innovation Park: Expected Slow, Steady Growth", Centre Daily Times, February 4, 2001. (pay site).
- ^ This is Penn State: An Insider's Guide to the University Park Campus (Penn State University Press, 2006), ISBN 978-0-271-02720-3, p. 137. Excerpt available at Google Books.
- ^ Catherine Chaput, Inside the Teaching Machine: Rhetoric and the Globalization of the U.S. Public Research University (University of Alabama Press, 2008), ISBN 978-0-8173-1609-9, p. 206. Excerpt available at Google Books.
- ^ "New Name For PSU Research Park: Innovation Park At Penn State", Penn State press release, July 13, 2000.
- ^ Nancy Caronia, "Looking fine at 40 -- New facility for Penn State Public Broadcasting.", Government Video, December 1, 2005 (pay site).