Football is often described as game of strategy. So perhaps it wasn’t surprising that the Green Bay Packers, through a joint venture between the team’s development arm and Microsoft, recently opened TitletownTech, a 50,000-sf innovation center in Green Bay, Wis., that is set up to cultivate and provide financial support to high-growth startup companies.
SGA, the architect on this project, has created a three-level “stage on which innovation and collaboration can flourish,” states Brooks Slocum, the firm’s New York Studio Manager. He elaborates that the building’s design applies “spatial strategies” that “maximize” proximity, flexibility and spontaneity.
The design reflects Wisconsin’s old mill buildings, showcasing brick, steel, and wood. Those features are juxtaposed with high-tech glass and state-of-the-art materials.
TitletownTech is designed and organized into three levels that promote user collaboration and interaction. The second floor is devoted mainly to office space.
Three components drive TitletownTech, which actually has been operational since last summer but had its grand opening on October 18:
•An innovation lab, focused on creating new ventures: where entrepreneurs and established regional businesses can engage to develop ideas, explore disruptive new business models and next-generation technology solutions. The first floor includes flexible seating reminiscent of stadium bleachers. Informal lounges and social spaces are interspersed throughout the building. “Hot spots” allow guests to congregate for impromptu meetings. And “sandbox” spaces are equipped with oversized writable magnetic walls to help users flesh out ideas and discussions.
•A venture studio, focused on building ventures: where new and emerging business models and scalable industry solutions are developed into stand-alone startup ventures. Microsoft will have employees based at TitletownTech, including a Technologist in Residence, who can be resources for entrepreneurs. Microsoft’s TechSpark initiative—a civic program created to focus on communities in six states that include Wisconsin—will also have a representative on site. (Microsoft’s agenda at TitletownTech includes its goal to eliminate the rural broadband gap for millions of Americans.)
•A venture fund, focused on funding and investing in high-growth startups aligned with industries in Northeastern Wisconsin that will bring opportunity to the region. As of last October, the venture fund had $25 million, and its limited partners include AmeriLux International, Baird, Cornerstone Foundation of Northeastern Wisconsin, Dickman Ventures, Green Bay Packaging, N.E.W. Venture Foundry, Plexus, Schreiber, Schneider, Sartori Cheese, The Village Companies and Weyers Investments, Delaware North, New York Mets and Sterling Project Development.
The first floor of an expansive atrium features flexible seating that suggest stadium bleachers, and encourages people to interact as that move from level to level.
TitletownTech is integrated into the Packers’ 45-acre Titletown District, located west of the team’s Lambeau Field stadium. The District’s 20-acre first phase, completed in 2017, includes a hotel, retail, restaurants, and sports medicine center. Phase 2, whose construction began last June, focuses on residential and commercial buildings, including at least 54 townhouses under constuction, as well as a five-story office building, and 152-unit apartment building. So far, the Packers have invested $170 million in its Titletown District.
“Northeastern Wisconsin has a burgeoning entrepreneurial ecosystem, and we felt Titletown would be a perfect place to further spur economic expansion in the region and beyond by bringing world-class digital innovations and expertise to Greater Green Bay,” explains Aaron Popkey, a spokesman for the Green Bay Packers. He goes on to say that TitletownTech will serve as a creative center where digital solutions are developed for key market challenges.
TitletownTech is already working with a handful of companies that include Oculogica, a digital healthcare firm that has developed the EyeBOX, the first FDA-approved neuro-diagnostic device that uses proprietary and innovative technology to track eye novement to determine if a person has a concussion (a tool that might benefit the football team directly).
Through BIM coordination, SGA and Miron Construction, TitletownTech’s CM, reduced the innovation center’s construction costs by between 1.5% and 3%. Utilizing Enscape software’s real-time rendering capabilities, SGA’s models represented the actual materials, design intent, specifications, detailing, and coordination. The models helped to identify, for example, that structural beam openings were too small, and that a large fan in the building’s atrium needed a framing system and mounting points.
Preconstruction visualization for the innovation center, offices, and boardroom also provided scheduling savings. And the team was able to spot MEP/FP clashes and re-route systems in a 3D clash-protection process.
Editor's note: Some information about Titletown Tech, and comments from Green Bay Packer spokesman Aaron Popkey, were added after the initial posting of this article.
Related Stories
Mixed-Use | Apr 22, 2022
San Francisco replaces a waterfront parking lot with a new neighborhood
A parking lot on San Francisco’s waterfront is transforming into Mission Rock—a new neighborhood featuring rental units, offices, parks, open spaces, retail, and parking.
Market Data | Apr 14, 2022
FMI 2022 construction spending forecast: 7% growth despite economic turmoil
Growth will be offset by inflation, supply chain snarls, a shortage of workers, project delays, and economic turmoil caused by international events such as the Russia-Ukraine war.
AEC Tech | Apr 13, 2022
A robot automates elevator installation
Schindler—which manufactures and installs elevators, escalators, and moving walkways—has created a robot called R.I.S.E. (robotic installation system for elevators) to help install lifts in high-rise buildings.
Office Buildings | Apr 11, 2022
SOM-designed office tower aims to promote health and wellness
Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM) recently completed work on 800 Fulton Market, a new mixed-use office building in Chicago’s historic Fulton Market/West Loop neighborhood.
Projects | Apr 6, 2022
Ryan Companies expands Chicago presence with new West Loop office
Ryan Companies US, Inc. (Ryan), a national leader in commercial real estate services, announces it has enhanced its Chicago presence with the opening of a new downtown office at 224 North Desplaines in the city’s West Loop neighborhood.
Airports | Apr 4, 2022
Dominican Republic airport expansion will add mixed-use features
The recently revealed design concept for the expansion of Santiago International Airport in the Dominican Republic includes a transformation of the current building into a mixed-use space that features an office park, business center, and hotel.
Codes and Standards | Mar 23, 2022
High office vacancies have cities rethinking downtown zoning
As record-high office vacancies persist in U.S. urban areas, cities are rethinking zoning policy.
Projects | Mar 22, 2022
Fast-growing Austin adds a $3 billion community
The nation’s fastest-growing large metro area is getting even bigger, with the addition of a $3 billion, 66-acre community.
Projects | Mar 18, 2022
Former department store transformed into 1 million sf mixed-use complex
Sibley Square, a giant mixed-use complex project that transformed a nearly derelict former department store was recently completed in Rochester, N.Y.
Projects | Mar 17, 2022
Plans unveiled for ‘Wall Street South’ mixed-use office block in West Palm Beach
Brand Atlantic Real Estate Partners, Wheelock Street Capital, and B+H Architects released design plans for a new mixed-use office block in West Palm Beach called Banyan & Olive.