WisconsinBiz

Water Technology Accelerator

Spurred by the close research and business development work between the Milwaukee region’s water technology businesses and academia, The Water Council is renovating a downtown Milwaukee warehouse into an unparalleled water research and business accelerator building. The center, scheduled to open in the summer of 2013, will be housed in a 98,000 square foot, seven-story building at 223 West Pittsburgh Avenue (recently renamed Freshwater Way) in the Reed Street Yards area of Milwaukee’s Walker’s Point neighborhood. The $22 million project will be a complete refurbishment of a century-old brick and timber warehouse into first class office and research space. The building will become the workplace for approximately 200 people and a catalytic project for the redevelopment of the Reed Street Yards and Walker’s Point neighborhood.

UW–Madison Research that Powers the State

The University of Wisconsin–Madison contributes to our state's economic vitality on a grand scale — engaging in groundbreaking research and equipping its graduates with the academic skills and entrepreneurial spirit needed to thrive in the world's ever-evolving high technology, knowledge-based economy.

Coalescing Strengths, Transforming a Region

In 2007, a group of water industry, academic, and civic leaders convened to discuss the breadth and strength of the water cluster centered in Milwaukee. From these meetings, The Water Council emerged to leverage our resources and transform the region into a World Water hub. The Water Council is transforming a region by harnessing the power of an existing international industry cluster, linking a rapidly expanding academic research community and convening some of the nation’s brightest and most energetic professionals.

Unique Johnson Controls labs at UWM speed discovery

When Johnson Controls built two high-tech laboratories to enable groundbreaking discoveries related to energy storage and batteries, company leaders decided to put the facilities where UWM students and faculty could readily contribute – right in the College of Engineering & Applied Science (CEAS).

Silicon Valley of Water

Sometimes called the “Silicon Valley of Water,” Southeastern Wisconsin’s water cluster strength is not only its technology companies but its unique academic research and talent development programs. Just as Stanford University took innovative ideas and research and nurtured them into global technology leadership, Wisconsin’s colleges and universities are helping to reshape our water technology cluster.

UWM’s Innovation Campus is poised to build

Innovation Campus, a public-private technical park established by the UWM Real Estate Foundation, has attracted its first private tenant.
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Building a strong Wisconsin together

Associated Bank is proud to sponsor the Economic Development Regions section of WisconsinBiz. Born in 1970 as an association of strong community banks, we have maintained a strong regional character throughout our history. We recognize and understand the differences in the business and financial needs of companies and communities in the various regions of our state. These needs are also reflected in the priorities of regional economic development organizations. For example, Grow North is focused on improving the fundamental economic drivers of growth, such as enhancements to transportation infrastructure and broadband access. Milwaukee 7 – among many other projects – is targeting national and international prospects to bring additional business into the state.

GE Healthcare gives UWM global impact

A unique collaboration aims to turbo-charge what is already a strong state industry cluster.

How to Build an Export Strategy

American fashion, music and culture may be all the rage among young people in Shanghai, Mumbai and countless cities across the globe, but when it comes to population growth, we're far from number one.

Concordia’s Environmental Center Teams Up With Japanese High School To Study Lake Michigan

Environmental Stewardship knows no geographic or political boundaries, so when Concordia University Wisconsin’s Office of International Studies and School of Education received a request from a Japanese high school to host an environmental camp focusing on freshwater studies and renewable energy, the University jumped at the opportunity.

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