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EUROPEAN CITIES
From Site Selection magazine, May 2012
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Top Floor

DBFrankfurt
Frankfurt’s strong assets include the global corporate headquarters of Deutsche Bank.
Photo courtesy of Deutsche Bank

Metros known and less-known scale Site Selection’s Best-to-Invest heights.

by MARK AREND
A

n expanded list of Best to Invest European cities adds representative metros of Austria, Italy and Spain on the Western side and Estonia, Turkey and the Slovak Republic in the East (see charts). These metros captured enough new and expanded facility investments in 2011, and were deemed superior to other metros in their regions in the LocationSelector.com analysis from Investment Consulting Associates outlined on page 28, to be recognized here for consideration when European locations are in play.

Western Europe
      1. Dublin, Ireland
      2. Frankfurt, Germany
      3. Edinburgh, Scotland
      4. Birmingham, England
      T5. Belfast, Northern Ireland
      T5. Paris, France
      7. Vienna, Austria
      8. Erfurt, Germany
      9. Turin, Italy
      10. Berlin, Germany
      10. Barcelona, Spain
Eastern Europe
      1. Budapest, Hungary
      2. Moscow, Russia
      3. Bucharest, Romania
      T4. Prague, Czech Republic
      T4. Warsaw, Poland
      6. Tallinn, Estonia
      7. Manisa, Turkey
      8. Bratislava, Slovak Republic
      9. Istanbul, Turkey
      10. Izmir, Turkey

Europe's Leading Technology Centers

Belgium-based Buck Consultants International, a leading site location advisory firm, analyzed the competitive strengths of 31 European cities to determine the best locations in Europe for technology-based companies. Josefien Glaudemans, managing partner, presented the firm's findings — The European Tech Cities Ranking 2012 — at the MIPIM real estate exhibition in Cannes, France, in March.

More and more international, technology-driven companies establish new R&D centers in Europe in order to gain from the technology base and talent pools in Europe's major cities, she explained. At the end of the day, these companies want to accelerate the innovation process of new products and technologies within their companies.

Buck Consultants International compared the 31 cities on five location factors: size of the technology base; availability and costs of highly skilled workers; size of the markets; international accessibility; and international business climate. These five factors were split in more than 25 indicators. The full presentation is accessible in the News & Publications section at www.bciglobal.com.

It is interesting to note that Europe's largest metropoles like Paris and London (including Oxford and Cambridge) lead the European ranking. "In these cities live a large number of knowledge workers, they host the most renowned top universities and have attracted a variety of R&D centers. All these factors work as a magnet for companies, which are looking for new locations for knowledge-intensive activities," noted Glaudemans.


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