After the Tech.com Failure in Late 2001, Silicon Valley Went Through a Very Dark Period in Which Major Companies Abandoned Their Buildings. But This Year, Real Estate in the High-tech Area is Booming!
2001 SPELLED DOOMSDAY FOR SILICON VALLEYAfter 9-11 hit in 2001, the high-tech companies that were once the dominant industry in the stock market
Some of the major office buildings that were being built for future tenants had all of the major hardware in place that would allow these ultra high-tech companies to come in and immediately start building up their company's net worth using T-1 connections, hundreds of high-fiber digital phone lines and internet servers that were capable of handling millions of computer software transactions.
Those buildings have since been left standing unoccupied for the past six years just waiting for the day to come when the dot com industry would finally recover. It appears that this time has come today, as one of the biggest office buildings in Silicon Valley has finally been filled by a major industry player.
BEA SYSTEMS BOUGHT THEMSELVES A $100 MILLION BUILDING
It looked like this year would bring more doom and gloom to the business partners at Sobrato Development Companies, who owned this $100 million, 17 floor industrial building when Nvidia, the graphic chips maker, backed out of buying the enormous building last November. But then, in February of this year, BEA Systems coughed up more than $135 million that they intend to use for their own business, not even needing to rent out any of the building's other floors to recoup their investment.
OTHER MAJOR TECH COMPANIES MOVING IN TO SILICON VALLEY BY THE BOATLOAD
Just in the last year alone, Apple, Yahoo!, and Google have sunk more than $400 million in massive real estate purchases in the Valley, where they plan to build business campuses and major headquarters for all of their main California branches. Cisco Systems also have added a thousand new employees to their main Silicon Valley site and plan to buy more property surrounding their headquarters so they can expand their already huge industrial complex.
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40% of all employees in Silicon Valley possess bachelor degrees, one of the highest percentage rates in the world.
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