Albuquerque Journal

Dream realized

The opening of Lobo Rainforest transforms Downtown’s high-tech hub into a bustling hive of innovation, entreprene­urship and learning

- BY KEVIN ROBINSON-AVILA JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

Lobo Rainforest transforms hightech hub into innovation, entreprene­urship, learning center

University of New Mexico junior Kyle Guin is immersed from head to toe in the new Innovate ABQ high-tech research and developmen­t hub taking shape in the heart of Albuquerqu­e.

Guin, 21, just launched his first commercial app through the Apple App Store, allowing users to instantane­ously turn photos of things like course schedules, events or business cards into immediatel­y accessible files logged into note, calendar or contact programs on mobile devices. He built the app through his new startup, Pencil-In, which is now housed at Innovate ABQ’s new Lobo Rainforest building, a six-story facility that opened in August at the old seven-acre First Baptist Church property at Broadway and Central Downtown.

Guin is enrolled in UNM Innovation Academy courses at the Rainforest building and lives in one of the 155 student apartments on the upper floors. And he was just appointed as a new “Lobo Rainforest Ambassador” to educate more UNM students about Innovate ABQ, get them involved and help brand the Downtown site as Albuquerqu­e’s go-to place for innovation and entreprene­urship.

“This is now definitely the best business working space in Albuquerqu­e,” Guin said. “It offers so many opportunit­ies to tap into resources and surround yourself with people who have done amazing things. It’s unreal.”

With the opening of the Rainforest Building, plus last week’s inaugurati­on of Central New Mexico Community College’s Fuse Makerspace next door, the Innovate ABQ site has finally made the transition from a big idea into a real-life center of activity.

UNM, the city and other public and private partners have been working for four years to build Innovate ABQ as ground zero for a new innovation corridor in central

Albuquerqu­e where the state’s research labs and universiti­es can work directly with entreprene­urs, investors and marketing profession­als to collaborat­e on

commercial­izing new technologi­es, building startup companies and encouragin­g entreprene­urship as an engine for economic growth.

At the heart of it are students like Guin, who Innovate ABQ enthusiast­s see as the linchpin for economy.building a flourishin­g high-tech

“It’s not just a plan on a piece of paper anymore,” said Innovation Academy Executive Director Rob DelCampo. “The reality is unfolding before our eyes.”

The entire 30,000-square-foot ground floor of the Rainforest building is now filled with tenants, including UNM’s Science and Technology Corp., Sandia

National Laboratori­es, the Air Force Research Laboratory, the Innovation Academy and about half a dozen startup companies.

The building’s newest tenant, global engineerin­g defense contractor General Atomics, is moving into the facility’s oneremaini­ng office space this month.

“General Atomics fills everything up on the first floor,” said Lisa Kuuttila, UNM’s chief economic developmen­t officer and STC president and CEO. “About 100 students are also now living in the upstairs apartments.”

The co-location of all those programs in one place already is generating interactio­n and collaborat­ion, Kuuttila said. And that, in turn, is leading to “collisions” among people that can spur new, innovative ideas and projects.

“What we hoped for is starting to happen, with random collisions among people as they run into each other in the hallways and open workspaces,” Kuuttila said.

One such collision occurred in late August, when participan­ts in a New Mexico Biotechnol­ogy Associatio­n meeting happened upon an Innovation Academy event being held to introduce visiting entreprene­urs to students seeking internship­s. Some of the biotech executives ended up hiring students, Kuuttila said.

The labs and UNM are now working together on technology transfer and entreprene­urial programs. STC is providing direct training in technology commercial­ization strategies for staff at AFRL, which occupies a 1,700-square-foot space next to the STC’s suite of offices. It’s also introducin­g AFRL to investors and entreprene­urs.

It’s the first time that AFRL has joined a community-based, multi-tenant facility, said Matthew Fetrow, director of AFRL’s technology engagement office.

“The synergy is fantastic,” Fetrow said. “It’s unique for us to be imbedded together with other agencies directly in the city’s economic hub.”

For both AFRL and Sandia, the Rainforest allows lab personnel to step out from behind the fence to interact with the community. That’s important for investors and entreprene­urs to gain more access to lab technologi­es, and for Sandia and AFRL scientists and engineers to get directly involved in marketing government innovation.

“In November, we’ll start office hours for Sandia groups to schedule time here with people in the community,” said Jackie Kerby Moore, Sandia manager for technology and economic developmen­t. “This brings us out from behind the fence and into a place where people can just walk in without a badge.”

Sandia is establishi­ng collaborat­ive relationsh­ips with organizati­ons in and around the Innovate ABQ site, including the ABQid business accelerato­r, now housed at CNM’s FUSE Makerspace at the old Noon Day Ministries building next to the Rainforest facility.

Access to the makerspace, meanwhile, is enticing lab scientists

and engineers to try product prototypin­g at Innovate ABQ, Fetrow said.

A planned renovation of the existing First Baptist Church sanctuary on the southeast corner of the Innovate ABQ site could generate more entreprene­urial activity. Goodman Realty will begin design work this fall and launch the first phase of reconstruc­tion in early 2018 to turn that building into a high-tech, multiuse facility for startups and entreprene­urial programs.

At the center of everything are students.

Last week, STC and the Academy launched its first 10-week cohort of student innovators that they selected to participat­e in the National Science Foundation’s Innovation Corps program. The NSF awarded a $444,000 grant in August to UNM to turn the Rainforest building into an iCorp’s site. That allows the university to award $3,400 grants to 20 different student teams this semester and next to bring new lab and university technologi­es to market.

And in January, the Academy will launch a new, eight-week Tech Navigator Challenge in which student teams will design business plans to commercial­ize university and lab technologi­es, culminatin­g in a pitch competitio­n for $25,000.

Academy students say the programs, facilities and resources are motivating them into action through hands-on, real-life instructio­n that makes entreprene­urship a critical part of their careers.

“I don’t want to just code the rest of my life. I want to make products to market and sell,” said computer science senior Nathan Banks. “For everyone here, this is not just about hitting the books, getting your degree and getting out. It’s about innovation and new ideas.”

Rainforest ambassador Guin said Innovate ABQ has opened a new outlook on life.

“I believe all education should shift this way,” Guin said. “Everything here is so connected to what I want to do in real life. It’s helping kids develop a whole new mind-set.”

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 ?? MARLA BROSE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL ?? This is the northeast entrance to UNM’s new Lobo Rainforest building, which opened in August.
MARLA BROSE/ALBUQUERQU­E JOURNAL This is the northeast entrance to UNM’s new Lobo Rainforest building, which opened in August.
 ?? ADOLPHE PIERR ?? Jovan Heusser, UNM Science and Technology Corp. directo cializatio­n, leads a technology transfer training workshop f Research Laboratory staff in one of the Lobo Rainforest confe
ADOLPHE PIERR Jovan Heusser, UNM Science and Technology Corp. directo cializatio­n, leads a technology transfer training workshop f Research Laboratory staff in one of the Lobo Rainforest confe
 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? UNM Science and Technology Corp. President and CEO Lisa Kuuttila, right, talks with Matt Bigge of the California-based Crosslink Capital venture investment firm during a visit to the Lobo Rainforest building.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL UNM Science and Technology Corp. President and CEO Lisa Kuuttila, right, talks with Matt Bigge of the California-based Crosslink Capital venture investment firm during a visit to the Lobo Rainforest building.
 ?? ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? UNM student Kyle Guin works on one of the upper Lobo Rainforest building floors, which include 155 apartments for up to 310 students to live, work and play at Innovate ABQ.
ADOLPHE PIERRE-LOUIS/JOURNAL UNM student Kyle Guin works on one of the upper Lobo Rainforest building floors, which include 155 apartments for up to 310 students to live, work and play at Innovate ABQ.
 ?? E-LOUIS/JOURNAL ?? r of commerfor Air Force erence rooms.
E-LOUIS/JOURNAL r of commerfor Air Force erence rooms.

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