Telecom Corridor
The Telecom Corridor is a technology business center in Richardson, Texas, a northern suburb of Dallas, which contains over 25 million square feet (2.3 million square meters) of office space and accounts for over 130,000 jobs.[1] Located in the Dallas/Fort Worth area and home to the University of Texas at Dallas, the Corridor is a strip about 6.5 miles (10.5 km) long along U.S. Route 75 (US 75) (the North Central Expressway), between President George Bush Turnpike and Interstate 635 (I-635) and is often considered an area of the Silicon Prairie. More than 5,700 companies, including 600 technology companies are headquartered in the area, including significant players such as AT&T, Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, Verizon, Samsung, Texas Instruments, and MetroPCS (now part of T-Mobile). Some of these companies also have offices in Telecom Valley located in California. Although the Telecom Corridor was a booming area of Dallas's economy during the late 1990s, the dot-com bust of 2000 hit the region hard. However, it began recovering in 2004, and that recovery has since picked up momentum, gaining both the operations of many non-technology-related companies and many previously non-existent residential units designed in the New Urbanist style.[2] The name "Telecom Corridor" is a registered trademark and may technically only be used to describe the area mentioned in this article.
Telecom Corridor Genealogy Project[edit]
The Telecom Corridor Genealogy Project is a project to enable professionals in the Telcom Corridor to find out about their common history and thereby to enable them to network more easily.
Transportation[edit]
Major highways[edit]
I-635
US 75 (North Central Expressway)
- President George Bush Turnpike (toll) (frontage roads:
SH 190)
Light rail[edit]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ "Workforce Information".
- ^ Reinhardt Krause. "Took Time, But Finally Tech Jobs Are Rising". Investor's Business Daily. Archived from the original on 2007-02-12. Retrieved 2007-01-31.
External links[edit]
- Asian Trade District
- Bishop Arts District
- Casa Linda
- Cedars
- Deep Ellum
- Design District
- Downtown
- Exposition Park
- Fair Park
- Kessler Park
- Knox-Henderson
- Lake Highlands
- Lakewood
- Lower Greenville
- "M" Streets
- Oak Cliff
- Oak Lawn
- Park Cities
- Preston Hollow
- Southwestern Medical District
- Trinity Groves
- Turtle Creek
- Uptown
- Victory Park
- West End
- DFW Airport (main hub of American)
- Love Field (main hub of Southwest)
- Freeways
- DART (rapid transit)
- DART Light Rail
- Streetcar
- M-Line Trolley
- North Texas Tollway Authority
- Trinity Railway Express
32°58′N 96°44′W / 32.96°N 96.73°W