Nickname for the cluster of high-tech companies near Portland, USA
This article is about an area in the northwestern United States. For the district in Novosibirsk, Russia, seeAkademgorodok. For the Portland sculpture, seeSilicon Forest (sculpture).
Intel's Ronler Acres campus in Hillsboro, Oregon
Silicon Forest is aWashington County cluster ofhigh-tech companies located in the Portland metropolitan area in theU.S. state ofOregon. The term most frequently refers to the industrial corridor betweenBeaverton andHillsboro in northwest Oregon. The high-technology industry accounted for 19 percent of Oregon's economy in 2005, and the Silicon Forest name has been applied to the industry throughout the state in such places asCorvallis,Bend, andWhite City. Nevertheless, the name refers primarily to the Portland metropolitan area, where about 1,500 high-tech firms were located as of 2006.[1]
Silicon Forest can refer to all the technology companies in Oregon,[3] but initially referred toWashington County on Portland’s west side. First used in a Japanese company’s press release dating to 1981,Lattice Semiconductor trademarked the term in 1984 but does not use the term in its marketing materials.[3] Lattice’s founder is sometimes mentioned as the person who came up with the term.[3]
The high-tech industry in the Portland area dates back to at least the 1940s, withTektronix andElectro Scientific Industries as pioneers.[4] Tektronix and ESI both started out in Portland proper, but moved to Washington County in 1951 and 1962, respectively, and developed sites designed to attract other high-tech companies.[4]Floating Point Systems, co-founded by three former Tektronix employees in Beaverton in 1970, was the first spin-off company in Silicon Forest and the third (after Tek and ESI) to be traded on theNYSE.[5] These three companies, and laterIntel, led to the creation of a number of otherspin-offs andstartups, some of which were remarkably successful. A 2003 dissertation on these spin-offs led to a poster depicting the genealogy of 894 Silicon Forest companies.[6] High-tech employment in the state reached a peak of almost 73,000 in 2001, but has never recovered from thedot-com bust. Statewide, tech employment totaled 57,000 in the spring of 2012.[7]
Unlike other regions with a "silicon" appellation,semiconductors truly are the heart of Oregon's tech industry.[citation needed]
TheOregon Graduate Institute was founded by Tektronix and the Tektronix Foundation in 1963 to provide education and training for employees in the high technology industry.
Intel's headquarters remain inSanta Clara, California, but in the 1990s the company began moving its most advanced technical operations to Oregon. Its Ronler Acres campus eventually became its most advanced anywhere, and Oregon is now Intel's largest operating hub. In late 2012, Intel had close to 17,000 employees in Oregon—more than anywhere else the company operated;[8] by 2022, the number had grown to about 22,000.[9]
The following is a sample of past and present notable companies in the Silicon Forest. They may have been founded in the Silicon Forest or have a major subsidiary there. A list ofPortland techstartups (technology companies founded in Portland) is provided separately.
nCUBE. Beaverton HQ was established in 1983. Acquired byC-COR in 2005, which was in turn acquired byARRIS in 2007.CommScope acquired ARRIS in 2019, and closed the Beaverton office in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Sequent Computer Systems (purchased by IBM in 1993) Sequent, founded by a team that included three Intel VPs and 15 other employees, also mostly from Intel, made a major contribution to multiprocessing and was largely responsible for the demise of large minicomputers, which could be replaced by much smaller and cheaper micro-processor-based multiprocessor systems. It went public in 1987 and was beginning to also encroach on the market for large mainframe transaction processing systems when IBM bought it out.