A couple items in the news this week reminded
me that Pittsburgh’s current growth spurt is still in its infancy. As I recently remarked to a long term Pittsburgher,
the current generation of residents has no concept of the paroxysm that was the
collapse of the steel industry. A
testament to the region’s resilience is that while something less than 20% of
jobs were eventually lost and for most western Pennsylvanians, a semblance of
the good life was still lived.
Pittsburgh and the region are regaining strength, rebuilding their economy
practically from scratch. It’s as if it
were newly settled, akin to cities on the West Coast after World War II.
This week, an online piece about one of the Silicon
Valley’s titan companies mentioned that it started with a visit to the Stanford
Research Institute [SRI] in 1959. It
then took another 10 years for that particular company to develop into an
ongoing entity, and still more time to become a Fortune 500 name. So my interest piqued, I looked at SRI’s
beginnings and discovered it was founded in 1946; immediately following WWII. That’s almost 70 years of work in the Bay
Area. And even Xerox’s Palo Alto
Research Center [PARC], which among other things played a major role in Apple’s
early development, was started in 1970.
Note that it’s only been in the last dozen years that UPMC’s Hillman
Cancer Center has hit its stride and this year’s establishment of The Brain
Institute is a comparative newborn. How many
years will it take both these centers to spin out not only important
breakthroughs in their fields but the expected economic benefits? Time obviously will tell. Patience is called for.
Related to this is the issue of whether Pittsburgh’s
nascent entrepreneurial spirit is growing and do we ultimately have what it
takes to re-establish as a world technology center. Of course we do, as does anywhere else on earth
if given freedom to think. But I do wonder
how and when that special Petri dish of circumstances forms to ignite the
creative geniuses. We’ve all heard that
Michael Dell started his computer company in his University of Texas dorm
room. But in that same period at UT,
John Mackey was dreaming of the natural grocery store that became Whole Foods
and his lesser known housemate on campus, Kip Tindell, started his business
plan for what became The Container Store.
Billion dollar companies all. Why
did UT during that period, long before high tech start ups were spoken of
colloquially everywhere, provide ground for those ideas and not Pitt or
CMU? I’m just asking. Time to make up for lost time.
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