Suvarna Garge (Editor)

Cambridge Innovation Center

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Industry
  
Innovation spaces

Founded
  
1999

Number of employees
  
100

Website
  
cic.us

Headquarters
  
Cambridge

Type of business
  
Private


Founder
  
Timothy Rowe Andrew Olmsted

Key people
  
Timothy Rowe, CEO; Geoff Mamlet, Managing Director

Community entrepreneurship tim rowe at tedxgrandrapids


Cambridge Innovation Center (CIC) is an American real estate services company which bills itself as a "community of entrepreneurs". The company was founded in 1999 by Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) graduates Timothy Rowe and Andrew Olmsted.

Contents

The innovators cambridge innovation center with founder tim rowe


History

CIC was founded in 1999 in 2,700 square feet (250 m2) at 238 Main St in Kendall Square (also the home of the MIT Treasurer's office). In April 2001 it grew to 18,000 square feet (1,700 m2) across the street at One Broadway. An unusual office design garnered its new office the Honor Award for Design Excellence from the Boston Society of Architects for 2000. It continued to grow, doubling in size twice by 2004, reaching 71,000 square feet (6,600 m2) and 75 companies.

In December 2006, a major transformer fire in an NSTAR electrical vault in the basement of One Broadway led to the building and the CIC being closed for 5 weeks. The 150 companies located in the building at that time, including Google, had to be relocated on an emergency basis in space provided by MIT.

In August 2008, CIC housed 170 companies, and was recognized as a phenomenon of sorts in a Boston Globe feature article. Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick visited Cambridge Innovation Center in January 2009. As of July 2013, CIC had grown to over 500 companies.

In May 2013, CIC announced its first expansion outside of Massachusetts. CIC St. Louis anticipates being able to house up to 100 companies when fully occupied.

Famous companies based at CIC

  • Google set up its New England headquarters in CIC in 2005. The first person to move in was Google Android (operating system) co-founder Rich Miner. It grew there until, at approximately 175 people and no longer able to fit, it relocated a block away.
  • Maven Technologies, the company that became a Yahoo subsidiary and the kernel of its operations in Cambridge, also began at CIC.
  • Great Point Energy, while based at Cambridge Innovation Center in 2007, raised $103M for its coal gasification technology in what was at the time one of the largest investments in the history of cleantech.
  • Trivia

    In 2008, Cambridge Innovation Center operated one of the first bikeshare programs in the Boston area.

    References

    Cambridge Innovation Center Wikipedia