Recursion and Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization to Jointly Launch Incubator

Life science and technology startups led by members of underrepresented communities will be encouraged to apply

SALT LAKE CITY--()--Recursion and the University of Utah’s Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization (TVC) have signed a memorandum of understanding to explore the launch, programming, and management of an incubator for life science and technology startups. The incubator will be located in Recursion’s former Research Park offices, and the company will sponsor the space for an initial period of three years.

“Recursion’s faster-than-anticipated success and growth meant that we needed to expand before our lease expired,” said Chris Gibson, Ph.D., co-founder and chief executive officer of Recursion. “With the space sitting dormant, we realized we had the opportunity to repurpose it to help foster the next generation of biotech and tech companies in Salt Lake City. Supporting the valley’s innovation ecosystem directly furthers our goals for recruitment and our thirst for new ideas and perspectives.”

The 14,500-square-foot facility includes 5,000 square feet of wet laboratory space, which is in extremely short supply in the Salt Lake Valley. This will be the first freestanding incubator with wet lab space in all of Utah. The space also contains offices, co-working space, and multi-function rooms.

It is anticipated that Recursion and TVC will jointly select an onsite program manager to operate the space and provide comprehensive support for the tenant companies—including mentoring, educational opportunities, exposure to potential investors, and referrals for basic business services.

“TVC has launched more than 150 companies—including Recursion—in the past decade,” said Keith Marmer, TVC’s executive director. “We know that finding affordable lab and office space is one of the biggest obstacles to building any company. Providing these resources—both the physical space and the accompanying support network—will greatly accelerate the companies’ go-to-market timelines.” Companies fostered in an incubator are twice as likely to succeed as those that do not receive similar support, according to research conducted by the National Business Incubation Association.

The Recursion/TVC incubator will give preference to university startups and will encourage applications from startups led by historically underrepresented founders, particularly those who have traditionally faced additional barriers to growth and funding.

“Innovative companies grow from diverse perspectives,” said Tina Larson, chief operating officer of Recursion. “We need to do everything we can to promote opportunities for women and individuals who have been historically underrepresented in science and technology—paying special attention to developing the next generation of business and technology leaders. This incubator will do just that.”

Full financial terms of the MOU were not disclosed.

Expressions of interest for laboratory and office space should be sent to Paul Corson, deputy director & senior director of entrepreneurship at TVC: paul.corson@tvc.utah.edu; 801.585.5016.

About Recursion

Recursion is a clinical-stage biotechnology company combining experimental biology and automation with artificial intelligence in a massively parallel system to efficiently discover potential drugs for diverse indications, including genetic disease, inflammation, immunology, and infectious disease. Recursion applies causative perturbations to human cells to generate disease models and associated biological image data. Recursion’s rich, relatable database of more than a petabyte of biological images generated in-house on the company’s robotics platform enables advanced machine learning approaches to reveal drug candidates, mechanisms of action, and potential toxicity, with the eventual goal of decoding biology and advancing new therapeutics to radically improve lives. Recursion is headquartered in Salt Lake City. Learn more at www.recursionpharma.com, or connect on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn.

About the Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization

The Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization is dedicated to helping the University of Utah’s faculty inventors bring their innovations to market. TVC is responsible for all aspects of invention management, patent prosecution, licensing, startup formation and support, equity management and early-stage funding. The center’s mission is to generate economic returns for the university and the state of Utah, expand the university’s reputation for innovation and positively impact society. The University of Utah was recently ranked as the 30th-most innovative university in the world by Reuters: TVC is proud to help foster this spirit of discovery. tvc.utah.edu

Contacts

Jessica Yingling, Ph.D.
President, Little Dog Communications Inc.
o/ 858.344.8091
jessica@litldog.com

Elizabeth Quinn Fregulia
Director of Marketing & Communications
Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization
o/ 801.587.9619
m/ 415.203.5779
elizabeth.fregulia@tvc.utah.edu

Release Summary

Recursion and the University of Utah’s Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization to launch incubator for life science and technology startups.

Contacts

Jessica Yingling, Ph.D.
President, Little Dog Communications Inc.
o/ 858.344.8091
jessica@litldog.com

Elizabeth Quinn Fregulia
Director of Marketing & Communications
Center for Technology & Venture Commercialization
o/ 801.587.9619
m/ 415.203.5779
elizabeth.fregulia@tvc.utah.edu