Wake Forest's Wireless Research Center puts Town on the Global Tech Map

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Wake Forest’s Wireless Research Center puts Town on the Global Tech Map by Latisha Catchatoorian

J

ust miles north of downtown Raleigh, the

RIoT is a community of technologists, business leaders,

picturesque Town of Wake Forest is a bustling

policy makers and entrepreneurs who all have a vested

community filled with charm and character.

interest in the Internet of Things industry.

It’s also home to a world-class applied wireless

“If you’re an inventor or a startup company with an

research and testing facility — the Wireless Research

idea that has any kind of wireless component, between

Center.

the Wireless Center and its RIoT initiative, we’ve

It’s easy to write off smaller municipalities as places for mom-and-pop shops only, or to think that cities like New York and San Francisco are predominantly where technological innovation is happening. Wake Forest proves both assumptions wrong. “The Town of Wake Forest is a vibrant part of the technology-rich Triangle region and the Wireless Research Center is playing a leading role in this renaissance,” said Jason Cannon, president of the Wake Forest Business & Industry Partnership, the town’s non-profit economic development entity. “The WRC is creating a critical mass of technology companies and partnerships in Wake Forest, attracting attention across the nation and around the world.” The WRC is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit world-class testing and research facility that provides services for engineering, antenna testing and commercialization. It strives to be a place that “serves large and small corporations as well as partners with universities and governments locally and globally, to address broad market and technology needs.” As a strategic economic development tool for the town, it’s helped launch more than 20 new local businesses and further facilitated the launch of more than 80 more across the region through its partnership with RIoT.

created this ecosystem to help you get to market as fast as possible, as accurate as possible, without any hiccups,” said Gerry Hayes, founder and CEO of the WRC. “It’s a very collaborative, communal experience.” The WRC facility and its certified test lab offer engineering and business services that support the commercialization of wireless products from initial concept through high-volume production. It also has a commercialization center that provides offices on a month-to-month basis for

“The Town of Wake Forest is a vibrant part of the technologyrich Triangle region and the WRC is playing a leading role.”

startup companies who want to operate within the WRC’s campus. Companies have access to the WRC’s equipment, engineering and strategic business services. Additionally, the WRC hosts an antenna test chamber that is so unique there are only four others like it in the world. “It was one of three in the world when it was built,” Hayes said. “We knew that it would put us on the telecommunications map, and it was definitely one that many of the engineering firms in the area could use if they had access to it.”


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