Richardson Edition | November 2024

From the cover

Richardson IQHQ to support city’s continued tech growth

BY MICHAEL CROUCHLEY

Two-minute impact

Richardson IQ Richardson’s Innovation Quarter includes the IQHQ, the DART Arapaho Center Station, Shops at Eastside, a 67-acre data center and more than

CAMPBELL RD.

Greenville sub-district

The Richardson IQ headquarters opened in 2022, and UT Dallas occupies around 13,600 square feet of the 27,000-square-foot space. UT Dallas also opened a 5G testing lab in concert with AT&T and Verizon. Joe Pancrazio, UT Dallas vice president for Research and Innovation, said the lab provides an evaluation facility for new 5G Radio Access Network products and a “wonderful opportunity” for university students. The IQ’s location is also a positive, he added. “[For vendors] to have ease of access to the facility, to be able to engage with other small businesses who might be interested in 5G or our next generation networking capacity—it just becomes a terric opportunity for the university, but also for the community,” Pancrazio said. The city’s partnership with Startup Runway will also support Richardson’s existing tech industry, Magner said. Magner said Startup Runway supports established companies looking to “expand to a new market.” He said companies could spend nine-12 months or more in the Startup Runway space before becoming independent—and he’s hoping those companies will choose to stay in Richardson.

Richardson IQHQ

13 million square feet of oce and industrial space.

COLLINS BLVD.

Duck Creek sub-district

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Employment sub-district

Arapaho Center Station (DART Rail)

Station area sub-district

ARAPAHO RD.

APOLLORD.

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SOURCE: CITY OF RICHARDSONCOMMUNITY IMPACT

Zooming out

What’s next

Dallas-Fort Worth is the fastest growing met- ropolitan area in tech, according to data from the Computing Technology Industry Association. DFW added 10,691 new tech jobs in 2023, ahead of New York City’s 8,312—the second most. Richardson has seen that tech growth rsthand. Employment in tech in the city grew 97.17% from 2018 to 2023, and the IQ added around 9,500 jobs from 2014 to May 2024. Between developing the future workforce and future successful tech companies, the IQ head- quarters’ role as an incubation space could help contribute to that continued tech growth. “One of the principal benets is the opportuni- ties that students who come to our university have the chance to pursue,” Pancrazio said. “I’m excited by it. I think innovation and entrepreneurship, as it’s realized through incubator space, to be the promise of research or inspiration enabled through the kind of incubator space that we oer.” Magner added that Richardson “needs” to

Job growth in Richardson’s IQ

Pancrazio said that 65% of UT Dallas students stay in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Beyond cultivating a workforce, Magner hopes to see tangible results from the city’s partnership with Startup Runway, as well. “We’re not just saying, ‘Come to Richardson, we’ll give you the incubation space, and then you’re on your own,’” Magner said. “We’re saying, ‘Come to Richardson, we’ll give you the incubation space, and we’ll help you as you take your rst and second step in the growth of your business, in the US … hopefully that will result in some of the space that we have available throughout the city to start being occupied by these international companies.”

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SOURCES: WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS FOR NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS, CITY OF RICHARDSONCOMMUNITY IMPACT

have an incubator space to recruit international companies into the city. “This is just now something that is expected by international business—you’re going to have a place for them to land in your community,” he said. “I think this is an incredibly important way for us to grow our international business presence.”

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