1. UW R+T Park Welcomes RIM to the Tech Neighbourhood

    May 27, 2009 by AURP Canada

    Waterloo, Ont. (Monday, May 25, 2009) – UW President, David Johnston, welcomes the 350 Research In Motion (RIM) employees who moved into the InnoTECH building at 300 Hagey Blvd. in the UW Research + Technology Park on May 19th after the Victoria Day holiday.

    This is another example of RIM’s long standing relationship with the University of Waterloo (UW) examples which include hiring of co-operative education and grad students, industry supported research projects, Institute of Quantum Computing funding, Balsillie School of International Affairs funding and Co-CEO Mike Lazaridis’ recent completion of his term as Chancellor.

    RIM is occupying the majority of teh 103,000 square foot bulding which is developed and owned by the Cora Group.

    The InnoTECH building is currently awaiting LEED Gold Certification and is the first of six buildings in the Park to pursue this standard.  This builidng is a model of Adrian Conrad and the Cora Group’s committment to the sustainable and environmental devleopment of commerical space for the research and technology community.

    ###

    About the UW Research + Technology Park:  The University of Waterloo Research + Technology Park is one of the newest research parks in Canada and is uniquely located on the University’s North Campus.  Designed to accommodate 1.2 million square feet of office space on 120-acres (49 hectares), the Research Park will house thousands of researchers, create new technology jobs, and generate billions of dollars in economic impact.  Today companies such as Open Text, Sybase, Google, Miller Thompson LLP, CGI, and Navtech Inc. call the Park thier home.

    Contact:
    Carol A Stewart
    UW Research + Technology Park
    castewar@uwaterloo.ca
    519-888-4567 x36339


  2. 2009 WATCH Magazine

    May 21, 2009 by castewar

    The Annual Magazine of the UW Research + Technology Park

    2009 WATCH Magazine

    Posted by: Carol Stewart | UW Research + Technology Park | Bus: 519.888.4567 x36339 | BB: 519.498.1664 | castewar@uwaterloo.ca | rtpark.uwaterloo.ca |


  3. Canada’s Technology Triangle Inc & Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics win Global City Award for Waterloo Region

    by castewar

     

    Canada’s Technology Triangle, Waterloo Region, May 21, 2009… Through the efforts of two powerful groups – Canada’s Technology Triangle Inc & the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics – the Waterloo Region is reshaping the Canadian “brain drain” and becoming an international “brain gain” region, earning the Canadian Urban Institute’s 2009 Global City Award to be granted June 5 at the Urban Leadership Awards in Toronto.

     

    “Together these two groups have managed to transform the Cambridge-Kitchener-Waterloo region into a global centre of excellence.  Their combined efforts have created a global identity for three cities and enhanced the region’s reputation, attracted high-tech businesses and improved the region’s place in the world,” said CUI President and CEO Glen Murray.

     

    About 500 elite members of Canada’s who’s who of city building will gather in Toronto on June 5 to honour Canada’s Technology Triangle Inc (CTT) and the Perimeter Institute, as well as 17 other groups and individuals across the country who are making Canadian cities exciting and dynamic places to live and work.

     

    “Part of the secret to the region’s success on the international stage is how well the players work together on the local scene,” said CTT’s CEO John Jung.

     

    “We’re still small enough that people can rally and build coalitions to make things happen here. We pool our resources between the local municipalities, the local businesses and the institutions and that allows us to showcase our communities on the international market in a way that few other places can. Our key is the collaborative nature of the way we work and the fact that we have a strong foundation of technology that dates back over the decades,” said Jung.

     

    The Perimeter Institute exemplifies a unique balance in the region – advancing fundamental knowledge that can lead to new innovations.  Propelled by a private-public partnership involving personal philanthropy and all levels of government, the institute is attracting highly qualified researchers from around the world, is pursuing long-term research that may lead to scientific breakthroughs of global impact, and is providing outreach activities to the region, the country and beyond.  

     

    “The acknowledgement of the CUI’s Global City Award supports our belief that cutting edge research and innovative outreach programs have an important role to play in contemporary urban centres. PI’s structure, activities and long-term goals are a model for excellence, now being noticed and copied by other centres around the world” said John Matlock, Director of External Relations and Outreach at Perimeter Institute.

     

    The Urban Leadership Awards (ULA) Program honours Canadian individuals, groups and organizations that have made significant contributions to improving the quality of life in Canada’s cities and urban regions. The 2009 ULA’s have been made possible by the generous support of a variety of corporate sponsors including Gold Sponsors Loblaw Properties Ltd., Scotiabank, TD Bank Financial Group, the Ontario Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, Environics, the City of Toronto and the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE). Community Builder Sponsors include Toronto Hydro, Local 27 of the Union of Carpenters and Allied Workers, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and Great West Life, London Life and Canada Life Assurance Companies.

     

    The judges for this year’s awards included Canadians who have dedicated their lives to public service and who have detailed knowledge of the local stories and triumphs of Canadians in their home communities. Under the chairmanship of the Hon. David Crombie, the committee included; Al Duerr, former Mayor of Calgary; Newfoundland’s Dr. Linda Inkpen; Dr. Antonia Maioni, Director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada; John Kim Bell, founder of the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation; Ms. Mitzie Hunter, a Vice President at Goodwill Industries; and, Dr. Nola Kate Seymoar, President and CEO, International Centre for Sustainable Cities, based in British Columbia.

     

    The Canadian Urban Institute (CUI) is a non-profit organization dedicated to enhancing the quality of life in urban areas across Canada and throughout the world.

     

    - 30 -

     

     

    Some Facts on CTT and the Perimeter Institute

     

    Canada’s Technology Triangle Inc

    ·         Canada’s Technology Triangle (Waterloo Region) derived its name from the longstanding reputation the region has for innovation, established by resident businesses. Canada’s Technology Triangle came to be used in the 1980s and the global recognition of its high technology cluster in the 1990s validated the name.

    ·         CTT Inc is the not-for-profit, public-private regional economic development partnership marketing the Waterloo Region of Ontario including the cities of Cambridge, Kitchener and Waterloo. Its mandate is to attract new businesses, investment, and talent while promoting regional economic growth.

    ·         CTT has become the “go-to” organization for businesses looking for a new location.

    ·         It works in partnership with all municipal economic development agencies of the three cities.

    ·         CTT specializes in external marketing building on the region’s strengths and by promoting the area’s universities and colleges that provide an available talent pool for employers. It advances opportunities for technological/manufacturing convergence and cost-competitiveness, based on solid research and trends analysis.

    ·         Companies in the region include RIM (BlackBerry), Open Text, DALSA, COM DEV, Christie (digital projection) and Toyota’s first, outside-Japan, luxury class car production.

     

    Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

    ·         Located in Waterloo Region, the Institute was created in 1999 through a personal donation of $100 M from Mike Lazaridis, Co-CEO of RIM,  He has since contributed an additional $50 M and, over the last 10 years, all levels of government have also invested.  

    ·         PI is an independent, non-profit, scientific research organization where international scientists cluster to push the limits of human understanding of physical laws and develop new ideas about the very essence of space, time, matter and information.

    ·         The research builds upon two great 20th century advances involving Einstein’s theory of general relativity describing physics on the largest observable scales of stars, galaxies and the universe itself, and the quantum theory which describes the behaviour of matter and energy on the smallest scales in the atomic and subatomic worlds where fundamental particles move and interact with each other.

    ·         Investigations into foundational areas can be transformative and, ultimately, provide the fundamental knowledge necessary to advancing society with all manner of new technologies. 

    ·         PI is home to 85 resident researchers and hosts a visitors program that attracts hundreds of other leading scientists from around the world each year.

     

     

     

    POSTED BY: Carol Stewart | UW Research + Technology Park | Bus: 519.888.4567 x36339 | BB: 519.498.1664 | castewar@uwaterloo.ca | rtpark.uwaterloo.ca |

     

     


  4. Collaboration = innovation

    May 20, 2009 by AURP Canada

    Canada must stimulate R&D spending, universities argue

    Karen Mazurkewich, Financial Post
    National Post, Tuesday May 19, 2009

    The year was 1965.  Canadian manufacturing was facing new challenges. A chief executive a BFGoodrich Tires in Waterloo, Ont., made a pitch to his community that what Canada needed most was 150,000 engineers: so a university was built.  A decade later, when the local insurance industry feared job losses because they couldn’t find enough trained actuaries, the university created a co-operative program in the applied mathematics department to help feed a need.

    Tires are no longer made in Waterloo, and the insurance industry in the city eventually did shrink, but the legacy of the university programs engendered a new breed of entrepreneurship and a new cluster of companies devoted to new industries: software development, wireless devices, and satellite technology, to name just a few.

    David Johnston, president of the University of Waterloo, like to repeate this history lesson to underscore a point: When industry needs to reinvent itself it turns to the innovators at universities.

    He also wants to drive home the message that the current economic downturn is forcing our country to re-examine its values.  “In the next decade, Canada has to contantly work harder at creating higher value and working smarter.”

    Tough economic times has university presidents doing some tough talking.  In the media frenzy surronding bank and auto bailouts, academic leaders have become increasingly vocal about the need for government and industry to keep looking forward.  For the presidents of top academic universities, innovation is the key to the future in Canada.

    But they have also expressed serious concerns that Canada may be losting the race to reinvent itself.

    Speacking at the Economic Club in Toronto last week, David Naylor, president of the University of Toronto, raised some serious concerns over Canada’s ability to build a successful and sustainable innovation economy.

    “I am grateful that universities and colleges are among the major beneficiaries of infrastructure spending by both the federal and provincial governments in this country,” Dr. Naylor told the audience. But he argues that even if infrastructure spending will spark the economy, Canada is not doing enough to stimulate creative industries.

    Dr. Naylor argued that not only is research and development spending as a percentage of GDP in Canada below such countries as Isreal, Singapore, and South Korea, even more alarming is the fact that R&D spending by Canadian businesses has been on a decline since 2002.

    Canadian universities are not winning many international research prizes either, he added.

    Retaining talent is a key factor in the knowledge economy, and the academics have expressed concerns that a shortfall of talent will stymie innovation.

    “We must attract talent and develop the talent you have… and somehow take the ideas that come from that skill base and translate it into either public policy or commerical goods and services that makes your community more prosperous,” said Dr. Johnston of Waterloo.

    How doe we create such communities? Collaboration, he said, is key.  Dr. Johnson is proud of the technology transfer from his university to the immediate community, and attributes that in part to the “Create Owns” policy at his institution, which allows professors and students to retain intellectual property rights – something most other universities don’t allow.

    But that policy alone cannot stimulate the greater changes needed in the country. More needs to be done to support the transfer of ideas outside the academic world, and this is where government and industries need to step up efforts.

    The Science Technology and Industry Council recently reported that for the period of 2002 to 2004, Canadian manufacturing firms ranged near the bottom of the OECD in collaboration with university researchers or government labs.  Dr. Naylor, who refers to the data as “unsettling,” points out that in 2007, the majority of private sector investment in R&D was done by a handful of companies: the top two being Nortel Networks and BCE. Today, Nortel is in bankruptcy protection.

    Dr. Naylor praised the Ontario government’s new $250-million Emerging Technologies Fun, and the federal government’s new Vanier Scholarships for PhD students, but he did call on better co-ordination of government programs to support R&D.

    “For understandable political reasons, every government loves to create new botique programs,” he said.  The problem is that there is a crossover and confusion among them that makes the system difficult for young entrepreneurs to navigate. The system needs simplification.

    There also still remains a shortage of seed and venture capital companies.

    “Canada, by almost all indicators, is a solid  middle-of-the-road performer when it comes to research and innovation today,” said Dr. Naylor.  But he believes that it is within our capabilities to move from mediocrity to excellence in innovation.

    He adds: “When basic research is taken to the marketplace, invention becomes the mother of necessity… and whole new industries can emerge on the backs of disruptive technologies.”

    kmazurkewich@nationalpost.com

    http://www.nationalpost.com/blogs/story.html?id=1607262


  5. Calgary Technologies Inc. Board Decision

    May 1, 2009 by AURP Canada

    Calgary Technologies Inc. (CTI) has moved a step closer to become a part of a new, full-service regional organization that will take technological innovations from idea to market, strengthening Calgary’s economy and utilizing its entrepreneurial and intellectual potential.

    This new, one-stop technology transfer and business incubator, currently under the working title of Innovate Calgary, will integrate the current institutions of CTI and University Technologies International (UTI). Innovate Calgary, and independent not-for-profit organization, is a collaboration between the University of Calgary, the City of Calgary and the greater regional innovation and commercialization community.  It will serve as a regional hub for technology transfer and presents a tremendous opportunity to build economic diversity while serving and supporting researchers, innovators and business in Calgary and Southern Alberta.

    This move to a one-stop, centralized hub is closely aligned with the Alberta government’s strategy to streamline and simplify the innovation and commercialization service landscape and to make more effective use of funding.

    At the Annual General Meeting on April 30, CTI’s Board of Directors was restructured to effectively position the organization for this potential transition.  A small and nimble interim board will guide the business through this process with six members appointed from two shareholders – three from the University of Calgary and three from the City of Calgary.  CTI’s third shareholder, the Calgary Chamber of Commerce, has graciously stepped aside for this interim period, although it will be closely involved in the process as it moves forward.

    The new interim board provides continuity by drawing on the expertise and knowledge of CTI from four former board members: Ms. Nancy Laird, former Chair of CTI; Ingy Randhawa, Chief Information Officer of the City of Calgary; Dr. Rose Goldstein, Vice President (Research) of U of C; and Glenn McMurray, Senior Executive Director, Offices of Research Services and Research Accounting at U of C.  City of Calgary Mayor Bronconnier and Charlene Anderson, University General Counsel, will also serve as board members during the transitional period.  John Masters, President & CEO of CTI, will continue in his position and report to the Board of Directors in this interim period.

    Earlier this year, the board of University Technologies International (UTI) also stepped down to allow for an interim board to begin the process of transition to Innovate Calgary.

    The interim structure ensures that CTI and UTI clients can expect business to continue as usual while aligning programs and staff to merge into the proposed entity. Projects that are currently in place are expected to continue without interruption. This structure also means that working groups, tasked by their interim boards, will be well positions to prepare each organization for the expected merger under Innovate Calgary.

    The city of Calgary, the University of Calgary and the Calgary Chamber of Commerce look forward to the strength in technology transfer and business development that Innovate Calgary will bring to the region, building on the expertise and successes of CTI and UTI. We also thank the past directors of the CTI board for their years of service and dedication to the CTI and its mission, and for their assistance with the transition to Innovate Calgary.

    For further information, please contact:

    Nancy Laird
    Former CTI Chair and member of the new interim board
    (403) 852.8927
    nancy_l@telusplanet.net

    Dr. Rose Goldstein
    Vice-President, Research
    University of Calgary
    (403) 220.7833
    vpr@ucalgary.ca

    http://www.calgarytechnologies.com/data/25/rec_docs/994_09-04-30-CTI_COMMUNIQUE-final-5.pdf