ANKARA: Foundation of high-tech valley was laid to become a town with 5,000 research and development (R&D) companies and 100,000 employees, with a ceremony attended by Science, Industry and Technology Minister Fikri Işık.
High-tech valley, which is being established to increase Turkey’s competitive power in the field of global innovation and information technologies, is being constructed on 740 acres in Kocaeli’s Gebze district. $50 billion in annual turnover is expected from the project. The purpose of the town will be to transform information into technology, and technology will be transformed into production.
High-tech valley will include 309 acres for R&D activities where academics, industrialists, entrepreneurs, ideas, logic and hard work will come together. Not only information firms, but also all R&D firms that want to continue their manufacturing activities based on information technologies, will also take their place in the town along with international innovation and technology transfer centers and prototype (Fab-Lab) and test workshops, creating a strong synergy.
Around 5,000 R&D companies will be located in the town along with recreational and sports areas and education and social facilities with a capacity of 100,000 people, offering a rich social and living environment for both employers and employees alike.
The region, with around 87 out of the 500 biggest industrial organizations in Turkey, 37 organized industry zones, 14 universities and centers of the Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkey (TÜBİTAK) and Turkish Standards Institution (TSE), are located, will be an attraction center for information technologies.
Further, at only a three-and-a-half hour flight and $25 trillion market volume, the region will reach a population of around 1.5 billion and will be an important logistic location including airports, high-speed train routes, highway connections and transit to the Gulf. Cooperation will be established with national and international universities to turn the town into an education center in addition to hosting the first thematic information center.