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Tech company to build science ghost town in NM

Tue Sep 6, 2011 3:21 PM EDT
technology, us, odd-news, town, scientific, ghost-town
Jeri Clausing, Associated Press
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ALBUQUERQUE — New Mexico, home to several of the nation's premier scientific, nuclear and military institutions, is planning to take part in an unprecedented science project — a 20-square-mile model of a small U.S. city.

A Washington, D.C.-based technology company announced plans Tuesday to build the state's newest ghost town to test everything from renewable energy innovations to intelligent traffic systems, next-generation wireless networks and smart-grid cyber security systems.

Although no one will live there, the replica city will be modeled after a typical American town of 35,000 people, complete with highways, houses and commercial buildings, old and new.

Pegasus Global Holdings CEO Bob Brumley says the $200 million project, known as The Center, will be a first of its kind in the U.S., creating a place for scientists at the state's universities, federal labs and military installations to test their innovations for upgrading cities to 21st century green technology and infrastructure in a real world setting.

It will also enable them to rub shoulders with investors, meaning it could ultimately draw enough new businesses to give the state a technology corridor like that in California's Silicon Valley or Virginia's Reston, Brumley said.

"The idea for The Center was born out of our own company's challenges in trying to test new and emerging technologies beyond the confines of a sterile lab environment," said Brumley. "The Center will allow private companies, not for profits, educational institutions and government agencies to test in a unique facility with real world infrastructure, allowing them to better understand the cost and potential limitations of new technologies prior to introduction."

For instance, he said, developers of solar technology would be able to assess exactly how their systems would be delivered and used in one house where the thermostat is set at 78, and another where it's set at 68. The center could also help show how efficient it might be in an old building versus a new one.

Brumley said Pegasus has been working with the state on the project for about 18 months, and has some initial plans already drawn up. It is now working on appointing a public-private advisory board and selecting a final site.

He said it will be developed on state-owned land, either in the Albuquerque-Santa Fe corridor or in the Las Cruces area near the Texas and Mexico borders. The northern part of the state is home to the Los Alamos and Sandia national laboratories and an Intel factory. Southern New Mexico has White Sands Missile Range, Fort Bliss and New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology.

Brumley indicate he had a site narrowed down but said it will likely be a few months before anything final is announced.

Initially, the project will employ about 350 people, Brumley said. But he estimates it could ultimately create 3,500 new jobs "outside the fence."

"This could give New Mexico a leadership position in the commercialization of federal research," he said. "It will serve as a magnet for investors."

Brumley said the ghost town will make money by charging user and operation and maintenance fees, selling energy to the grid by subleasing some of its state land for the development of office buildings, hotels and restaurants.

Gov. Susana Martinez said the state is committed to working with Brumley.

"I am confident this innovative project would provide a great boost to New Mexico's economy," she said in a statement. "We are pleased to be able to offer the resources, open spaces, and talented workforce required to make this effort a success."

My administration is committed to an ongoing relationship with Pegasus that will allow The Center to thrive and create New Mexico jobs."

© 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Regions: United States , Albuquerque/Santa Fe
  • Public Discussion (6)
Jim420

Here's an idea.... USE A REAL CITY, THAT HAS FAILING TRAFFIC AND POWER SYSTEMS AND LACKS DATA NETWORKS..

Where are the construction workers that will build this city live??? in the city would be the sensible option..

people talk about GOVT wasting money on stupid projects.. THIS IS WHAT WE MEAN..

oink oink oink oink PORK BARREL PROJECT FOR NEW MEXICO>

AMERICA ALREADY HAS 300,000 empty foreclosed homes... 167,000 in Nevada alone.. use them.. don't build more

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Tue Sep 6, 2011 3:52 PM EDT
greck

people talk about GOVT wasting money on stupid projects.. THIS IS WHAT WE MEAN..

the GOVT isn't paying for it:

With offices in Washington, DC; Reston, Virginia; and London, UK, Pegasus Global plans to locate the privately owned, commercially operated facility in the State of New Mexico

Pegasus Global intends to privately finance The Center

source:

http://www.pegasusglobalholdings.com/press-releases/center-for-innovation-testing-and-evaluation-010911.html

    #1.1 - Tue Sep 6, 2011 6:42 PM EDT
    Jim420

    read between the lines

    This could give New Mexico a leadership position in the commercialization of federal research,"

    Gov. Susana Martinez said the state is committed to working with Brumley.

    ghost town will make money by charging user and operation and maintenance fees, selling energy to the grid by subleasing some of its state land

    the fleecing of taxpayers is written all over this "private" project

    but the BIGGEST obvious flaw in the project... making it completly useless for appling anything developed to a living city

    No permanent population will reside within its boundaries.

    so unless everyone is going to move out so a city could be retrofitted... I hear a sucking of $$$ coming from taxpayers nationwide

    • 1 vote
    #1.2 - Wed Sep 7, 2011 11:09 AM EDT
    Jim420

    federal labs and military installations to test their innovations for upgrading cities to 21st century green technology and infrastructure in a real world setting.

    basically this company plans to profit by charging taxpayers to "fix" their FAKE real world setting"... to see if we could fix a REAL real world setting.. What American benefits?? the federal govt has plenty of real citys to test new innovations... take a look at failing infrastructure.. and you will see, there is not a need to construct fake citys... It's not nuke weapon testing....

    • 1 vote
    #1.3 - Wed Sep 7, 2011 11:16 AM EDT
    greck

    read between the lines

    please show me the part where the business and its employees won't be paying taxes or to lease the land. I didn't see that between the lines. The "work with" part? Seriously?

    I personally can see the benefits of having a laboratory in which to test out a new idea. I hear tell many scientists like that too. It's a way in which evidence can be garnered that a new product, system, etc. would work in the real world so that it CAN be implemented in pilot communities.

    This is a segue that makes such things as you want possible, not a substitute. Many of the best ideas don't make it to implementation simply because there isn't strong enough evidence that they are worth the investment.

    moreover, if something doesn't work as expected (most things don't) and require tweaking (most things do) it can be done with much greater ease than if one had to do so with the consent of an entire community.

    I think what you're not getting is the massive disruption that any one retrofitting of any one house causes, let alone an entire community. You would advocate doing that with things that are experimental? People who live in houses have a tendency to need to live their lives.

    I do like your idea of actually having people live there, probably it would be best to rent some portion of the community to people who are willing to have researchers at their houses on a frequent basis, and having their homes ripped up and fitted for the next project. The flaw in most research done in a setting like this would be that there is no accounting for the human factor.

    I live in NM along the I-25 Corridor; I know the areas they're talking about building this place. If anybody wanted to live there, they could, and pretty cheap. It's not like the land was going to any better use. It's vast and barren. It's beautiful, but it isn't real high in demand. It would be the perfect place for something like this (I like the idea of using the area between Santa Fe and Alb. better than further south), particularly for solar research. We get plenty of sunshine. It's sunny here even when it's raining. There's little reason the entire state couldn't be solar powered.

    • 1 vote
    #1.4 - Wed Sep 7, 2011 11:51 AM EDT
    Reply
    RACHEL1-933952

    a 20-square-mile model of a small U.S. city.

    Already did this in NM in the 40's didn't they????

      Reply#2 - Wed Sep 7, 2011 12:34 PM EDT
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