LATEST NEWS

Microchip Significantly Expands Strategic R&D Commitment in the UK

A new design center in Cambridge will give Microchip access to a highly skilled engineering workforce, allowing it to expand rapidly and develop new solutions for a wide range of markets

With UK and European companies seeking advanced technology to solve challenges in communications, IoT, and automotive applications, many are looking for local support from major solution vendors. Microchip Technology Inc. (Nasdaq: MCHP) a leading provider of smart, connected, and secure embedded control solutions, today announces the inauguration of a major new facility at Cambridge Research Park, Cambridge, UK.

At the heart of Microchip’s plans to develop more of its smart, connected, and secure solutions in the UK area, the new center will add significant R&D space, which will allow Microchip’s business units to further develop their already broad offering. The new site will help Microchip improve its focus on the needs of several of its highest-priority markets, such as IoT, automotive, industrial, and consumer.

To gain immediate benefit from the facility, many of Microchip’s highly skilled development engineers and other staff will transfer from the company’s Ely site, with plans in hand to boost the number of employees at the Cambridge site over time.

“The Cambridge site is ideally situated in one the world’s top technology areas and will enable us to attract top talent to build state of the art products and serve our customer base,” said Sumit Mitra, senior corporate vice president of Microchip’s 32-bit microcontroller, microprocessor, wireless, aerospace and development tools business units. “We have already onboarded a large number of talented and experienced engineers for the new center and expect that the new opportunities we will offer—to develop exciting solutions for the most significant and dynamic technology markets—will further attract the highly talented staff we need.”

“The facility is intended to become a premier Microchip engineering center, employing 200 highly skilled silicon engineering staff and advanced laboratories,” said Neel Das, senior director of Microchip’s 32-bit microcontroller business unit. “Establishing the new facility in Cambridge means we can meet this target by tapping into the wealth of engineering talent that exists in the area. The Cambridge Research Park is a hub of innovation and an excellent venue to develop the high-tech solutions on which we have built our reputation.”

The three-story building will offer approximately 10,000 square feet per floor, providing space to support multiple product lines including 16- and 32-bit microcontrollers, 32-bit microprocessors, and wireless connectivity products plus technology development, physical design, and human resource support.


Credit: Microchip Technology

Danit

Recent Posts

Quantum Machines to Establish Flagship Hub at the Illinois Quantum and Microelectronics Park

New collaboration will establish a quantum-control–enabled center at the IQMP to accelerate and scale fault-tolerant…

3 days ago

SENAI raises $6.2M to launch real-time intelligence for threats hiding in online video content

With a seed round led by 10D Ventures, SENAI emerges from stealth to help government…

3 days ago

Dassault Systèmes and NVIDIA Partner to Build Industrial AI Platform Powering Virtual Twins

 Shared industrial AI architecture combines Virtual Twins and AI infrastructure deployable at scale. Science-validated world…

3 days ago

New Power Module Enhances AI Data Center Power Density and Efficiency

Microchip’s MCPF1525 power module with PMBus™ delivers 25A DC-DC power, stackable up to 200A The…

5 days ago

Datarails Launches Spend Control to Give CFOs Full Visibility on Contracts and Eliminate Zombie Subscriptions

New AI-powered platform – the first with full ERP integration – includes an AI agent…

5 days ago

AccuLine reports 94% sensitivity in clinical trial of its 4-minute cardiac diagnostic system

The study validated the CORA system’s ability to rule out coronary artery disease with a…

7 days ago