

Forum Showcases Synergy Business & Technology Center, Santa Barbara’s Newest Incubator
By Alex Kacik, Noozhawk Business Writer | @NoozhawkBiz | Published on 03.22.2012 The facility, which can host about 30 small companies, is designed to provide flexible and functional office space for startups. The MIT Enterprise Forum Central Coast showcased on Wednesday night Santa Barbara’s new business incubator, the Synergy Business & Technology Center at 1 N. Calle Cesar Chavez. Attendants got a sneak peek of the transformed lemon-packaging warehouse that now will host a

Business Center Opening To Help High Tech Start-Ups
News Article by KCOY12 Central Coast News – view the article on their site SANTA BARBARA – A new business and technology center is opening its doors to small businesses looking for a collaborative workspace. The business center called Synergy is designed for high tech start-ups. The 6,500 square foot building on Calle Cesar Chavez is the newest business incubator.The concept is to bring together small start-up businesses looking to grow and help out fellow entrepreneurs.The c
Pacific Coast Business Times: "Tech leaders preview new incubator in Santa Barbara"
Santa Barbara will soon have a new technology incubator space, and its organizers are giving technology insiders a sneak peak on March 21. The Synergy Business & Technology Center at 1 N. Calle Cesar Chavez is slated to open next month. Its organizers hope it will restore some of the cheap, flexible office space for startup companies that was lost last year when RightScale, a cloud computing firm, had grown so large that it signed a lease on the entire 26,000 feet of space at

Tech leaders preview new incubator in Santa Barbara
By Stephen Nellis on March 19, 2012. Pacific Coast Business Times Santa Barbara will soon have a new technology incubator space, and its organizers are giving technology insiders a sneak peak on March 21. The Synergy Business & Technology Center at 1 N. Calle Cesar Chavez is slated to open next month. Its organizers hope it will restore some of the cheap, flexible office space for startup companies that was lost last year when RightScale, a cloud computing firm, had grown so