Purdue News

 

VIDEO
Krannert Dean Richard Cosier says the Burton Morgan Center will help students focus on and develop the skills needed to become entrepreneurs (51 seconds)

AUDIO
Amanda Fischer, a graduate student from Bloomington, Ill., says the new facility will encourage students to be creative and put forth their best effort. (36 seconds)
Deborah Hoover of the Burton Morgan Foundation talks about the late entrepreneur and the center that bears his name. (39 seconds)
Purdue President Martin Jischke says the new center will carry forward Morgan's spirit of entrepreneurship. (51 seconds)
Don Blewett, entrepreneurship center associate director, talks about the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship as Purdue's version of an entrepreneurial startup. (36 seconds)

RELATED INFO
Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship
Discovery Park

 

October 21, 2004

Discovery Park's first building completed

Purdue dedicates Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Purdue University's Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship, the first building completed in Discovery Park, was dedicated today (Thursday, Oct. 21) during an event that took place adjacent to the center.

Burton Morgan Center dedication
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The center, which was finished in June, is a $7 million, 31,000-square-foot, two-story facility at Purdue's Discovery Park, the university's hub for interdisciplinary research located on State Street on the west edge of campus. The center includes a 72-seat lecture room, a presentation room, faculty offices, and several conference and breakout rooms for use by park occupants.

"It's appropriate that the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship is the first Discovery Park building to be completed," said Purdue President Martin C. Jischke. "The center will provide a launching pad from which Purdue research and collaborations will pay big economic dividends for Indiana."

The building was funded by the Burton D. Morgan Foundation, established by Morgan, a Purdue alumnus from Hudson, Ohio, who died in 2003. John V. Frank, president of the Morgan Foundation, said: "Purdue's concept of combining higher education with entrepreneurship is very exciting. We believe this grant is an excellent use of the foundation's resources."

Burton D. Morgan Center
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Morgan received his Purdue degree in mechanical engineering in 1938. In 1992 the university awarded him an honorary doctorate in management.

Known for his entrepreneurism, Morgan started 50 companies, six of which have become major corporations, including Morgan Adhesives, one of the world's largest makers of pressure-sensitive adhesives. He also was president of Basic Search Co., an idea-development firm, and wrote several books on entrepreneurism.

Morgan began sponsorship of the Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition at Purdue in 1987 to help Purdue students develop an appreciation of the free market system and the role of the entrepreneur in a market economy. He also established an endowment for the Krannert School, now valued at more than $4.1 million.

Krannert School Dean Richard A. Cosier, who directs the center for entrepreneurship, said activities at the center are already well begun.

"Even before we had this great new facility, the entrepreneurship center had sponsored several business plan competitions and awarded more than $500,000 to startup companies in the last two years," Cosier said. "We'll be announcing several new initiatives over the next 12 months."

Don Blewett
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The Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship is home to:

• The Technology Transfer Initiative, which assists faculty who research issues industry encounters when trying to license and market new technologies and products. As part of the initiative, the Innovation Realization Lab pairs engineering and management graduate students on projects to help them understand the way research fits in with social and commercial needs. It also will help faculty design courses to teach entrepreneurship.

• The Burton D. Morgan Entrepreneurial Competition, in which students from over the entire campus work together to demonstrate their business plans for new products or services and show how they could be developed into profitable businesses. Teams compete for $100,000 in prize money each year.

• A portion of the Purdue Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) program, in which undergraduates work with community service agencies to find ways to use technology to solve problems and improve services.

• The New Ventures Laboratory, which allows entrepreneurs and venture capitalists to visit campus and conduct workshops. The lab also provides students with the opportunity to administer a venture fund investing in new technologies and also will bring to campus entrepreneurs-in-residence and sponsor speakers and seminars.

Discovery Park map
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• The Opportunity for Indiana Business Plan Competition's three venues, which offer a minimum prize purse of $50,000 – $25,000 for first place, $15,000 for second and $10,000 for third. The Lilly Endowment is sponsoring the competitions for three years, beginning this fall in West Lafayette, Hammond and Fort Wayne. Local sponsorships may increase the prize amounts and add professional services for the winners.

• The Purdue Life Sciences Business Plan Competition, now in its third year, offers almost $150,000 in prize money. The competition, which is primarily sponsored by Roche Diagnostics, has attracted contestants nationally and offered special prizes for the top Indiana-based startup companies.

Located southwest of State Street and Intramural Drive in West Lafayette, Discovery Park includes the e-Enterprise Center; the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship; Bindley Bioscience Center and the Birck Nanotechnology Center, which are under construction; and Discovery Learning Center. The new Biomedical Engineering Building also will be located in Discovery Park.

The entrepreneurship center dedication is part of a 10-day celebration that focuses on ways Purdue is improving education and helping the state of Indiana as part of its strategic plan and $1.3 billion fund-raising campaign.

Writer: J.M. Lillich, (765) 494-2077, mlillich@purdue.edu

Sources: Martin C. Jischke, (765) 494-9708

John V. Frank, (330) 258-6512

Richard A. Cosier, (765) 494-4366, rcosier@mgmt.purdue.edu

Don Blewett, Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship associate director, (765) 494-4485

Purdue News Service: (765) 494-2096; purduenews@purdue.edu

PHOTO CAPTION:
At the dedication today (Thursday, Oct. 21) of the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship, Purdue President Martin C. Jischke watches as the late philanthropist's daughters and granddaughter unveil a portrait of Morgan that will hang in the center. From left are Jischke, daughters Suzanne Morgan and Mary Graves, and granddaughter Brooke Riley. The Burton D. Morgan Foundation provided funds to build the $7 million, 31,000-square-foot building, the first to be completed in Discovery Park, the university's interdisciplinary research hub. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger)

PHOTO CAPTION:
The Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship is the first building to be completed in Purdue's Discovery Park, the university's interdisciplinary research hub. The center for entrepreneurship houses a number of initiatives to encourage entrepreneurial research by university professors and students and serve as a resource for the citizens of Indiana. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger)

PHOTO CAPTION:
Don Blewett is the associate director of the Burton D. Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship. The building, which was dedicated today (Thursday, Oct. 21), is the first to be completed in Purdue's Discovery Park. The Birck Nanotechnology Center and Bindley Bioscience Center are under construction. Groundbreaking for the e-Enterprise Center took place Oct. 19. The university's trustees have approved building the Discovery Learning Center. (Purdue News Service photo/David Umberger)

PHOTO CAPTION:
The map of Discovery Park shows the five buildings in the 40-acre site located on State Street at the west edge of campus. The Burton Morgan Center for Entrepreneurship is completed and occupied. The Birck Nanotechnology Center and Bindley Bioscience Center are under construction. Groundbreaking for the e-Enterprise Center will take place Oct. 18. The university's trustees have approved building the Discovery Learning Center. The biomedical engineering building will be located in Discovery Park but is not officially a part of the park. (Purdue University graphic)

 

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