Saturday, December 15, 2007

UAlbany moves computing college onto Harriman

The University at Albany's College of Computing and Information, which opened in 2005, is moving its office to the 330-acre W. Averell Harriman State Office Campus.

By June 40 researchers are expected to be in building 7A.

Gov. Eliot Spitzer believes the new tenant will begin transforming the state office complex into a tech park.

Spitzer said the state will issue Request for Qualifications for companies interested in developing Harriman. The state also issued a Request for Proposals to develop specific parcels on the site.

The College of Computing and Information is made up of the departments of information studies, computer science and informatics.

It was created to target one of the fastest growing job markets in the country--information technology.

Spitzer and officials at Harriman say the school will act as a magnet to attract high-tech companies that want to tap into that work force. It also plays on the high-tech strength of UAlbany's College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering.

The idea to transform the Harriman campus into a tech park was first advanced by former Gov. George Pataki in 2002.

The $240 million plan, which was expected to take two decades to complete, called for 600,000 square feet of new Class A office space, 1 million square feet of renovated office space, 400,000 square feet of new R&D space, and 200,000 square feet of neighborhood retail space, along with a learning center and hotel.

There were 10,000 state workers on the campus in 2002. The goal was to move all but 1,000 jobs off-campus and create 8,000 private-sector jobs.

Today, 7,400 state workers remain, and plans have shifted.

"This pragmatic, comprehensive new plan will meet the area's existing needs even as it speeds the campus to an important role in 'innovation economy' new growth," Spitzer said. "This plan will transform an underutilized state asset into a center for technological innovation, job creation, and economic development in the Capital Region. The new Harriman campus represents a crossroads where technology and regional growth meet."

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source: bizjournals.com

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