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NYIRN

The Next Generation of Urban Manufacturing in Philadelphia

Event on May 17, 2012

Can Philadelphia’s sustainability movement support policies and initiatives to strengthen urban manufacturing? Find out at this Urban Sustainability Forum.

Thursday, May 17, 2012. 6:00–8:30 pm
Networking Reception: 6:00–6:30 pm
Program: 6:30–8:30 pm

Register: urbanmanufacturing-eorg.eventbrite.com/

Event Details

Thursday, May 17, 2012 - 6:00pm to 8:30pm

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New York Industrial Retention Network

Page last updated January 6, 2011

The New York Industrial Retention Network (NYIRN) is an economic development organization established in 1997 to strengthen New York City's manufacturing sector and promote sustainable development. In 2010, NYIRN consolidated with the Pratt Center for Community Development and is now a project of the Pratt Center.

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Services for Industrial Businesses

Page last updated January 6, 2011

Information and Assistance for Industrial Businesses
in New York City

If you own or manage an industrial business, NYIRN can help you sustain and expand your company through help with

  • marketing opportunities
  • accessing incentives and tax benefits
  • connecting to government agencies and economic development professionals

 

Financing and Incentives

NYIRN can help your company identify local banks with a history of lending to manufacturing businesses.

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Research on Manufacturing

Page last updated January 6, 2011

Research and Market Analysis on New York City's Manufacturing Sector

The New York Industrial Retention Network uses research and analysis to shape policies and identify strategies to best support New York City’s industrial and manufacturing businesses. We conduct sector-based studies to better understand the needs of the city’s industries and promote opportunities to retain and grow these local companies.

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Green Manufacturing

Page last updated January 6, 2011

The New York Industrial Retention Network is committed to green manufacturing: industrial production that minimizes environmental impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions. Urban manufacturing is in itself green becuase it generates goods for local and regional consumption, reducing carbon emissions related to shipping, and is accessible to workers by mass transit, bicycle or foot. Sustainable manufacturing processes also help manufacturers succeed in the urban environment, where they must coexist in close quarters with other businesses and often residential communities.

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The Federal Role in Supporting Urban Manufacturing

Report last updated April 7, 2011

Pratt Center and Brookings Institution release strategy for making cities the center of an industrial business boom

 

Download the report
Download the case studies
 

Revitalizing American manufacturing is widely acknowledged as vital to our country’s economic recovery and long-term prosperity—but first, rusty old assumptions about what actually gets produced in the USA need to disappear and give way to policies that support today's budding businesses: small, speciality operations that are increasingly being located in the nation's cities. A report by the Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program and the Pratt Center for Community Development, “The Federal Role in Supporting Urban Manufacturing,” describes the changing economic geography of America’s production sector—and how the federal government should work with state and local leaders to better support its growth and development.

The report looks at how cities, including New York, have made sure that budding manufacturing businesses have room and resources to grow. While conventional wisdom says that urban manufacturing is in decline because it's no longer necessary, the Pratt Center/Brookings research found that for decades urban manufacturing has been sidelined by government policies that control the money, land and other resources businesses need to succeed. The report outlines essential steps to put government to work in support of manufacturing instead of against it, and open up job growth where it's most urgently needed—in the cities where the workers, transportation and markets already exist.

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