|
NASA Press Release: 98-121
N ASA announced the award of cooperative agreements to
three entities, each of which will establish a high-
technology business incubator at one of three NASA Centers:
the Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD; the Langley
Research Center, Hampton, VA; and the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, CA, combined with the Dryden
Flight Research Center, Edwards, CA.
The award made by Goddard is to a team led by the
Maryland Economic Development Corporation. Team members
include the Emerging Technology Center of the Baltimore
Development Corporation; University of Maryland, Baltimore
County; the Johns Hopkins University; the Morgan State
University (Clarence M. Mitchell Jr. School of Engineering);
the University of Maryland; The Abell Foundation; and the CAN
Company.
Langley awarded the second new high-technology business
incubator to the Virginia Center for Innovative Technology.
Team members include Christopher Newport University; Hampton
Roads Partnership; Hampton Roads Technology Council; Hampton
University; Mentor Technology Ventures; Norfolk State
University; Small Business Development Center of Hampton
Roads; and the College of William and Mary.
The third new high-technology business incubator award
was made by the NASA Management Office at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory and by the Dryden Flight Research Center to the
California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, CA. The
university will build upon the ongoing success of the Pomona
Technology Center, an independently developed incubator,
located in the technology park on university land.
These business incubators will provide U.S. start-up or
small existing high-technology firms and U.S. educational
institutions with a wide array of critical business
development support services for the primary purpose of
commercially applying NASA technology. Each new business
incubator will receive funding from NASA in the amount of
$400,000 per year for fiscal years 1998 and 1999, and will in
turn match (or exceed) NASA's contribution through cash or
in-kind funding from non-federal sources.
In addition to the establishment of these three new
business incubators at NASA centers, funds also were
provided, based on program guidelines, to the six existing
NASA incubators to enhance services to incubator firms. The
existing NASA-sponsored incubators include: the Ames
Research Center, Moffett Field, CA; the Johnson Space Center,
Houston, TX; the Kennedy Space Center, FL; the Lewis Research
Center Cleveland, OH; the Marshall Space Flight Center
Huntsville, AL; and the Stennis Space Center, MS.
With the addition of the three new NASA business
incubators to the existing six, NASA now has in place a
nationwide resource to expand the growing high-technology
interests of small businesses and educational institutions.
Further information on these awards can be obtained through
the following NASA center E-mail addresses:
Ames Research Center:
cblake@mail.arc.nasa.gov
Dryden Flight Research Center:
yvonne_kellogg@dfrc.nasa.gov
Goddard Space Flight Center:
galcorn@pop700.gsfc.nasa.gov
JPL (NASA Management Office):
rdemoch@nmo.jpl.nasa.gov
Johnson Space Center:
henry.l.davis@jsc.nasa.gov
Kennedy Space Center:
jim.aliberti-1@ksc.nasa.gov
Langley Research Center:
c.l.allen@larc.nasa.gov
Lewis Research Center:
viterna@lerc.nasa.gov
Marshall Space Flight Center:
sally.little@msfc.nasa.gov
Stennis Space Center:
kirk.sharp@ssc.nasa.gov
|

|