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CENTER WILL BOOST SECURITY, TELECOM
Jan. 27, 2003
Norfolk State University will break ground this year on a technology research complex
that will be a robust telecommunications hub in southeastern Virginia, help with a city
of Norfolk homeland security plan and serve as an economic stimulus for the region.
The first phase of the $86 million public/private initiative, being overseen by NSU's
Enterprise and Empowerment Foundation (E2F), involves constructing a 160,000-square-foot
building that will house applied research, venture support and workforce development programs.
A second 240,000-square-foot building will house a telecommunications infrastructure,
co-generation facility and businesses that require high-speed bandwidth or are involved
in collaborative research with the university. "We expect the business community, particularly
those businesses that need access to high bandwidth, will be attracted to the [Research and
Innovation to Support Empowerment (RISE) Center], and we will have space available for them
to co-locate," said Robert Askew Sr., E2F's executive director. Research will focus on
technology — biometrics, optical engineering, nanotechnology, information assurance and
smart materials, to name a few — that will be of particular interest to the telecommunications
sector, he added, permitting NSU students and faculty to work collaboratively with the
region's eight other universities, with four federal labs and internationally. Once the
telecommunications infrastructure is developed and high-speed bandwidth is available, Askew
said that the RISE Center, which would sit in the middle of an economic empowerment zone,
might attract companies to the region. Regarding what he called Norfolk's "bold" and
"innovative" homeland security model, Askew said the RISE Center can serve as a focal point
to run many applications, such as geographic information systems, for the region. This will
lower costs for all participants.
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