
Santa Fe College is looking to create a $31 million three-story development to replace the latest Center for Innovation and Economic Development on University Avenue and Sixth Street in Gainesville.
The expansion will triple space for business incubators, said Dug Jones, the college’s associate vp for economic development. The very center is among three buildings that define the Blount Center campus.
“We’ve recently developed the chance to expand the campus here,” Jones said. “The vision is designed for this campus every single child accommodate more students, specifically in East Gainesville.”
According towards the expansion plans, the brand new facility would offer 15 college-credit certificates, 14 associate of science and five bachelor of applied science degrees.
There are now 25 startups at the center, only seven have a workplace, Jones said. The brand new building would expand the organization incubator place of work and academic programs for business and knowledge technology.

Ravi Bhosale, CEO of NeatBiz Solutions, a cpa and bookkeeping service, operates his business within the center by using a staff of four. Practically will do for five people, though the expectation of growth, he was quoted saying, a larger facility would be ideal.
“I would hope for a place, at the least, for 10 people,” he was quoted saying. “We are expecting to double (staff) next several years.”
He said the center’s location, beside the bus stop, is ideal for his staff.
Jones declared that during construction many of the startups would relocate to the college’s Gainesville Technology Entrepreneurship Center in east Gainesville.
The college has already raised about $17 million from donations, two different appropriations on the Florida Legislature and a grant within the U.S. Economic Development Administration. Jones said the remaining $14 million really should be secured this year.
Blount Center Director Cheryl Calhoun said the building consistantly improves master planning process.
“Our current plan’s to make whatever technology and business programs that will be currently housed at our northwest campus and move those to the Blount Center,” she said.
The current building is approximately 10,000 square centimeter and substituted for a building encompassing about 86,000 square footage, she said.
“We just hired a designer,”?Calhoun said. “We have not even designed plans for that building, all we’ve really done is definitely the master planning process.”
“One of the construction managers coined this,” she said. “Where east meets west along with the reality that we might generate a space where our Gainesville residents could come and gain the talents that they need to indulge in this innovation culture.”
Calhoun said she hopes to meet up with the architect from Harvard Jolly Architecture in the following so often.
“We will always be 24 months out before i would bond with a finished process,” she said.
