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7:34am Thursday 3rd July 2008
BOSSES at Milton Park, the £400m business and technology park near Didcot, are to invest millions of pounds in new buildings - despite the credit crunch.
MEPC, which owns the 250-acre park, is to pump £6m into a new 39,000 sq ft innnovation centre for start-up and early-stage companies and entrepreneurs. The firm, which owns eight business parks nationally, has appointed Oxford Innovation, a leading operator of the centres, to manage the new building at 99 Milton Park.
MEPC managing director James Dipple said: "My job here is largely to manage risk and I think that now is the right time to establish this innovation centre. More people might want to take premises such as this rather than get locked into much less flexible terms.
"We will offer space here for any enterprise from a one-man show up to businesses employing between ten and 20 people."
He said: "I've been in the property business for 30 years and seen plenty of ups and downs. You have to ask: is it ever a good time?"
Oxford Innovation already supports more than 350 start-up businesses at 13 innovation centres, offering them offices on flexible terms, access to investment networks which match investors to businesses, and mentoring entrepreneurs. Managing director of Oxford Innovation, Dr David Kingham, said: "Working with MEPC Milton Park, our aim is to develop a flagship innovation centre that will be a hub of entrepreneurial activity for early-stage technology companies."
In addition to the innovation centre, MEPC is investing another £4m in a new speculative office block the same size as the new centre.
Mr Dipple said: "It sounds a big investment, but with the property at the park worth a total of £400m we can afford the risk."
Milton Park is the workplace for more than 6,500 employees working in offices, warehouses and laboratories.
I was set to interview Keith Allen in the run-up to Treasure Island, but he cancelled. I mention this non-event because, Allen not being someone I naturally associate with children’s entertainment, my central question was going to be: “Who’s the target audience?” The poster gave little away. Was it even to be a kids’ show? Would it be dark and/or adult? And how would he be playing Long John Silver? Straight-up murderous or loveable rogue? Having seen the show, I still don’t have my answer. What’s more, I’m not sure the production team has it, either.
Charlotte Keatley’s gentle, nostalgic and also vaguely feminist drama My Mother Said I Never Should was the latest production by the ever-reliable Oxford Theatre Guild.
One of Sunday’s newspapers reported that Michael McIntyre was on the point of signing a six-figure deal with the BBC and looked in line to succeed to Jonathan Ross’s Saturday night TV slot.
Being someone who works from home I’d have to admit that my tendency to be easily-distracted is not always conducive to being productive.
November 18 2008 . . . Oxford United fans may come to remember that date as the day Sam Deering came of age.
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