Expanding Together
Expanding Together
Originally Posted 1/14/2019 |
FROM THE WINTER/SPRING 2019 ISSUE
Standing on a podium on the Downtown Campus in September, Graham Weston told a roomful of people that, thinking back years ago, he never wanted to actually get involved in the revitalization of San Antonio鈥檚 urban core. Yet there he was, announcing to a crowd of press, city and county leaders, and businesspeople, his donation of $15 million to help build UTSA鈥檚 new School of Data Science.
鈥淚 realized that being able to help bring a tech district to downtown San Antonio is a calling,鈥 he told the group, which also heard from Bexar County Judge Nelson Wolff, San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg, City Manager Sheryl Sculley, and UTSA President Taylor Eighmy.
鈥淯TSA鈥檚 commitment鈥s exactly what our community needs.鈥
The announcement of the Downtown Campus expansion brought a wave of excitement for the possibilities that lie ahead as the university and city work together to build the urban core and attract industry. 鈥淐ollaboration between San Antonio鈥檚 education, industry, and public sector is spurring high-impact community projects and progress,鈥 San Antonio Economic Development Fund President Jenna Saucedo-Herrera says. 鈥淯TSA鈥檚 commitment to contribute to building a sustainable workforce pipeline for information security and management companies in San Antonio is exactly what our community needs.鈥
Port San Antonio CEO Jim Perschbach is optimistic about San Antonio鈥檚 future, saying UTSA鈥檚 new National Security Collaboration Center and Downtown Campus expansion are definitely going to be a 鈥渟park鈥 for the urban core but adds that a true test is making sure all communities are leveraged. He points out as examples the South Texas Medical Center鈥檚 work in bioscience and Port San Antonio鈥檚 transportation center and aviation work. He says the NSCC is one way of making that connection because it brings together the research from government and academia plus the industry that will transform the research into products and services. 鈥淯sing the NSCC as something of a hub to get a big wheel spinning will be tremendously powerful,鈥 he says, 鈥渂ut it needs to be more than just a UTSA effort. The goal really is to create those intentional collisions, and that is tremendously exciting.鈥
Connected devices like pacemakers are a prime example, Perschbach says. They鈥檙e obviously very important to people who use them, but companies that sell them and doctors who install them have to be sure they are secure. To do that, cyber businesses and researchers would need to work with those in the medical community to create a hub of expertise. 鈥淲e need to be leveraging our best strengths in San Antonio,鈥 Perschbach says, 鈥渁nd we become of one of the few places in the world that can say we have that kind of expertise. When you see how many connected devices there will be in the next 10 years鈥攁nd we have the knowledge on keeping those secure鈥攖he world is going to beat a path to our door.鈥
Weston sees companies looking for strong collaborations but also established clusters of knowledge and business as well as strong public transportation and walkable streets and neighborhoods. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 an urban community we don鈥檛 have yet,鈥 he says, 鈥渢he idea of being able to live and work in the same place and not always having to drive a car.鈥
In the end, Weston says he believes the School of Data Science will be instrumental in creating the jobs of the future. 鈥淏ringing great jobs is the most important thing. But companies won鈥檛 move here without a talent pool,鈥 he says. 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to see many, many UTSA kids wearing backpacks, crossing our downtown streets, going back and forth to class. If we鈥檙e producing talent, we have the best shot at getting those companies with those jobs. I think this is just the beginning of big change for San Antonio.鈥