The Sun (Malaysia)

A Silicon Valley by the Seine

> The world’s biggest tech incubator in Paris, bankrolled by visionary French billionair­e Xavier Niel, will house up to 1,000 startups

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STATION F, a 34,000square-metre facility which entirely fills an old railway depot, is being bankrolled by billionair­e Xavier Niel, who revolution­ised the French internet and mobile market with his low-cost Free service and is now on a crusade to put French technology on the map.

The cavernous concrete and glass hub, which aims to house up to 1,000 startups, will be a “very visible place that creates a strong image for Paris”, Niel told AFP.

“The idea is to create a place that acts like a beacon and helps others,” he added.

Station F ( right and below) is situated in the fast-changing 13th district – an airy neighbourh­ood of modern highrises, shops and cinemas that is home to France’s National Library.

The space has been designed to create the feel of an American college campus, with entreprene­urs paying 195 (RM954.20) a month for a spot in the hub, which is divided into three areas: ‘create’, ‘share’ and ‘chill’.

The incubator is the biggest of around 40 that have sprung up in the French capital, which is competing with London and Berlin for the title of Europe’s technology leader.

France’s 39-year-old President Emmanuel Macron, who won the election at the head of a liberal grassroots movement often likened to a startup, has pledged to promote entreprene­urship and quash perception­s that France is “unfriendly” to business.

“I want France to be a startup nation. A nation that thinks and moves like a startup,” Macron said earlier this month at a tech conference in Paris, where he announced the creation of a 10 billion (RM49 billion) fund for innovation.

“This is the place to be!” he declared.

Facebook, Amazon and Microsoft have already come onboard Station F, to mentor the startups. The entreprene­urs will also partner on-site with top French universiti­es and venture capital funds.

Niel, who launched a no-fees school for computer coders in Paris in 2013 that broke the educationa­l mould, has invested

250 million (RM1.2 billion) of his own money in Station F.

He envisages a day when “people from the world over will come to create their startup in Paris”.

Currently, London has the lead in luring internatio­nal talent. The French are hoping the pendulum will swing across the Channel when Britain leaves the EU.

In the first half of 2016, France squeaked by Britain for the number of startup financing operations, the EY consultanc­y found.

By the amount raised, however, Britain was far in the lead at 34%, with France in second place at 16%, although that was still over (RM4.9 billion).

Among those to have received huge capital injections from US investors are BlaBlaCar – valued at over 1 billion, making it what is known in the tech sector as a ‘unicorn’ – and online advertisin­g firm Criteo.

“The dinner table conversati­on has gone from French bashing to French tech,” according to 29-year-old Remy Rousset.

Rousset’s startup Wivaldy, which helps consumers control their electricit­y consumptio­n, is one of the companies that will occupy a berth in Station F. 1 billion

“It’s good to be part of an ecosystem, where everyone is in the same mindset and wants to grow very, very fast,” he said.

An engineer by training, Rousset said the business climate for entreprene­urs in France had changed “enormously” since he graduated in 2009, thanks to the growing network of incubators.

“Back then, many dreamed of one thing: going abroad and working for a big group,” said Rousset.

“Now, when you talk to students, they want to stay in France and join a startup. It’s a golden age!” – AFP

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