Ingenuity Centre welcomes new tenants

(L-R): Hara Two (LiveTheGo), Manjit Rana (Ingenin), Rob Johnson (Research Consulting), Mark Tock (Operations Director UNIP), Naseem Iqbal (Moby Tap Ltd)

A landmark development designed to nurture the next generation of technology businesses is home to more than half a dozen new ventures less than three months after its opening.

Jo Johnson, Minister of State for universities, science, research and innovation, officially opened the £5.2m Ingenuity Centre at the University of Nottingham in October.

Part of the University of Nottingham Innovation Park on the Jubilee Campus, the Centre aims to provide a home for technology ideas with commercial potential, whether they have been developed by entrepreneurial students, University research projects or early-stage businesses looking to grow.

So far, the Ingenuity Centre has attracted ventures launched by students, inward investments from elsewhere in the UK and even an international business which is new to the UK. The businesses range from a clinical trials software start-up to a specialist internet marketing company. It’s expected that a number of space technology companies will also move into the facility.

They have been attracted by prestige, purpose-designed facilities which put them alongside other tech firms they can share insights and experiences with. The building is also home to the University’s dedicated centre for the development of entrepreneurial skills, the Haydn Green Institute.

Dr Mark Tock, Operations Director at the University of Nottingham Innovation Park, said: “The University already has a very strong portfolio of services for enterprise and innovation, many of them concentrated on this site, and the Ingenuity Centre was the natural next-step.

“What we’re seeking to achieve here is the significant economic impact which comes from nurturing knowledge businesses likely to deliver high value jobs because of the specialist nature of what they do. That is already apparent in the first wave of tenants.”

The businesses are based inside a circular, three-storey building whose tyre-tread architectural shell takes its inspiration from the history of a site which was once home to bicycle legend Raleigh.

The Centre’s tenants will benefit from regular events which deliver insights useful to growing technology businesses, and access to relevant student talent and specialist University research.

The University aims to attract up to 50 businesses to the Ingenuity Centre over the next three years, with a focus on aerospace, energy, data and digital technologies.

It’s hope they will employ up to 350 people, generating a turnover of £25m between them.

Dr Tock added: “We’re thrilled by both the numbers of businesses who have moved into the Ingenuity Centre already and by the genuinely fascinating ideas within those businesses.

“There is already a pipeline of people wanting to follow them and I’m expecting to make some significant announcements about new tenants in the new year.”

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