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Cummings Research Park


Cummings Research Park, located primarily in the city of Huntsville, Alabama is the second largest research park in the United States, and the fourth largest in the world. The Research Triangle Park (RTP) in North Carolina is the only research park in the United States that is larger. However, since RTP is spread over areas in three counties and intermingled with many non-research firms, and CRP is fully concentrated with strong restrictions to the type of occupants, there is justification to credit CRP as being the largest contiguous research park of its type in America. Cummings Research Park is a member of the Association of University Research Parks (AURP [1]). The University of Alabama in Huntsville serves as anchor tenant for the park. UAH is a comprehensive research university with more than 8,400 students. Half of the university's graduates earn a degree in science or engineering.

Cummings Research Park was voted as the Most Outstanding Science Park in the World in 1997 by the Association of University Research Parks.

In 1961, Milton K. Cummings, then president of Brown Engineering Company, and Joseph C. Moquin, his later successor, selected a tract of undeveloped land on the western edge of Huntsville for building a new headquarters. Located adjacent to land that had recently been acquired by the University of Alabama for developing a Huntsville Branch and within a few miles of major Army and NASA development centers on Redstone Arsenal, this area was ideal for establishing a high-technology research park.

Cummings and Moquin, with the support of rocket pioneer Wernher von Braun, proposed that the City of Huntsville zone the area as a research park district. In 1962, the City established this zoning, with 3,000 acres of land officially designated Huntsville Research Park.

Brown Engineering (later Teledyne Brown Engineering) was the first to build in the park, opening its campus the inaugural year. As America rushed into the space race, other companies quickly followed; these included giant national firms such as Lockheed, Northrop, and IBM, smaller outside firms wanting to open Huntsville operations, and a number of newly organized local enterprises.


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