EvoNexus, San Diego’s free high-tech incubator, announced that it has enrolled three more startup companies during ceremonies yesterday that officially marked the opening of its new facility.
CommNexus, the San Diego wireless industry group, announced five months ago that it was leading the creation of the free and “no strings attached” startup incubator, to be headed by wireless industry executive Cathy Pucher. EvoNexus, which is structured as a nonprofit organization, plans to eventually house 10 to 12 technology startups; it named its first three startups less than two months ago.
CommNexus and EvoNexus have both moved their offices into part of a 25,000-square-foot commercial office building that was previously occupied by San Diego-based Leap Wireless, (NASDAQ: [[ticker:LEAP]]), which sells prepaid discount mobile phone service through its Cricket Communications subsidiary. By providing the office space to EvoNexus for one year at no cost, Leap made the largest single contribution of more than three dozen companies and individuals that donated in-kind services and cash to the incubator, according to Pucher.
“San Diego is an innovation economy,” Leap CEO S. Douglas Hutcheson told the crowd. “We’ve spawned more new companies in San Diego than I think anyone would have believed, and it’s vital that we support that.”
For the startups that are lucky enough to get selected, the incubator provides free office space, including utilities, Internet service, office equipment, and volunteer business mentoring for up to two years.
“Other cities don’t recognize the collaboration that we have here,” San Diego Mayor Jerry Sanders told a lunchtime crowd of roughly 150 people who attended a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the incubator. The mayor was joined by other local dignitaries and industry officials, including CommNexus board chairman John Major, the former chairman and CEO of two San Diego wireless companies, Novatel Wireless and Wireless Knowledge. “As we entered into the recession of recessions, a lot of non-profits hunkered down, and frankly that would have been the easy thing for us as well,” Major said. “But that’s not the way we operate.”
Pucher, the incubator’s executive director, told me