Category: Old Stories


Small business is no small matter in this town

By Becky Diercks,

As they look toward Hagerstown’s economic future, town officials aren’t exactly thinking big. Quite the contrary; they’re convinced that small business is the way to go, and they’re making a concerted effort to encourage individual entrepreneurs to locate their start-ups.

Although a small business can’t provide the quantity of local jobs and the immediate tax payoffs of a large corporation, it often brings other economic and quality-of-life benefits that the bigger firms can’t match.

For example, because many of today’s entrepreneurial efforts are technology-based or knowledge-based, they’re less likely to bring with them the environmental drawbacks of a manufacturing or industrial operation. Also, high-tech or knowledge-economy firms attract skilled, creative, professional workers – well-educated people who tend to be actively involved in their communities.

In short, one creative and committed entrepreneur can make a big difference in a comparatively small town.

Nate Logston works at his studio.Case in point: Nate Logston, co-founder of Igloo Studios – a new media design firm with offices above the local pharmacy on West Main Street. Logston, trained as an architect at Ball State University, began his professional career in 2004 with a well-known architectural firm in Richmond.

In his off hours, Logston did freelance work, using a little-known software package he had discovered while in college – called SketchUp – to create computer-generated three-dimensional drawings and models for several clients.

Logston’s use of SketchUp – pushing the capabilities of the program – soon caught the attention of officials at the company that had created the software; they offered him a job as a software trainer. Within a year, Logston had left his traditional “day job” in Richmond. He and two other young designers, both based near Los Angeles, helped develop a training curriculum and soon were crisscrossing the nation to conduct SketchUp seminars attended by thousands of architects and designers.

And then came Google.

The Internet search-engine giant, looking for a way to integrate 3-D modeling into its Google Earth mapping software, bought the @Last Software, the creators of SketchUp, and wisely kept Logston and his two California co-owners on as trainers.

“We knew this software probably better than anyone,” Logston recalls, “so we became the first certified Google SketchUp trainers.”

Igloo Team, from left to right: Nate Logston, Drew Dishman, and Jason Eales (not pictured: Jake Conrad).With Google’s muscle behind the project, Logston and his California comrades – Alex Oliver and Mike Tadros – soon found themselves busier than ever. They liked the work, largely because they were so taken by, and so involved with, the software itself. “It sounds kind of funny, I know, but we feel really passionate about SketchUp,” Logston says. “We really helped push and evangelize the application, and its success is something we’re all very proud of.”

Still, this high-tech trio could all see that the time was right to change directions, to separate from Google a little more and focus on their own company. In June 2005, they did just that, forming Igloo Studios. Google, Whirlpool and Volkswagon, are several of a growing group of clients Igloo serves from its two offices – one in the Los Angeles area, and one here in downtown Hagerstown, where Logston leads a four-person team of Web-savvy 3-D modelers.

“It’s a perfect situation for me,” Logston says. “I love the work, and I’m really comfortable here. I was born and raised here, and it’s a great place to run a company.”

Logston also appreciates the town’s entrepreneurial environment, and he’s especially grateful for the very-low-interest small-business loan he obtained from the town. The money – drawn from the town’s Economic Development Income Tax (EDIT) fund – made it possible for Logston to move his budding business outside his home and into the office on West Main.

“The EDIT funds were a wonderful resource for us,” Logston says. “With that loan, we were able to buy our equipment and get going right away. We’re paying on it gradually over five years.”

Who knows? By that time, the Hagerstown office of Igloo Studios may grow by leaps and bounds.

“The overhead here is very low compared to what my partners have to pay in L.A.,” Logston says. “We’ve actually talked about moving the whole operation here.”

These are the divisions within Igloo Studios:

http://www.go-2-school.com

http://www.taptheresource.com

http://bluemarbleproject.com/

Town still buzzing about this summer’s ‘Tin Lizzie’ invasion October 16, 2008 Downtown landmark to be a mecca for art and artists October 16, 2008 Hagerstown’s town manager engineers a meaningful life October 16, 2008 Service isn’t just a buzzword, it’s his business model October 16, 2008 Vintage fly-in highlights Hagerstown’s “T” party June 25, 2008 The park, the pool … and we’re outta school! June 25, 2008 Small business is no small matter in this town June 25, 2008 Eco-friendly industrial park will put town on the cutting edge

By Becky Diercks,

It’s not easy being green, but area economic-development experts know that eco-friendly business is progressive – and they’re convinced that it will be profitable. That’s why they’ve embarked on an ambitious plan to build an environmentally conscious industrial park in the Hagerstown area – perhaps on State Route 1, near Interstate 70.

“Even though this project is still in its planning stages, we have a very clear vision of what we want the eco park to be,” says Jim Dinkle, president and CEO of the Economic Development Corporation of Wayne County (EDCWC). “It will be a LEED-certified site, built to be sustainable and built to attract the kinds of firms we want: high-tech and life-sciences businesses, not the smokestack type.”

A LEED-certified facility is one that meets the standards of the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design rating system developed in 1998 by the U.S. Green Building Council. Those standards rate building performance in five categories of sustainability: site, materials and resources, energy and atmosphere, water-use efficiency and overall indoor environmental quality.

The first tangible step in the Hagerstown project is for the EDCWC to hire a qualified engineering firm – one that is well-versed and experienced in the LEED system – to conduct “geo-technical studies” to determine the best site for the park.

“We’ve put together an RFP (request for proposals) to find a qualified engineering firm,” Dinkle explains. (Click here for a copy of the RFP). “We’re looking for a firm that can ensure that the building site doesn’t include wetlands, and that it avoids soil-compaction issues.” He said he hopes to have the firm chosen before Labor Day and to have determined the proper site for the park’s construction before the end of the year.

The ultimate vision for the eco park, Dinkle says, is for it to be a privately developed and owned site on a lot of between 100 and 120 acres – large enough to accommodate six to eight small to medium-sized businesses.

Officials hope to have the park built and occupied by at least one tenant before the spring of 2010 – less then three years after Hagerstown officials first approached the EDCWC with the idea of developing that type of eco-friendly facility in the area.

Dinkle says the eco park “will truly be a first-of-its-kind industrial park for Indiana” adding that, by developing the site quickly, “Hagerstown and Wayne County should be way out in front” of other Indiana communities. Though he acknowledges that the timeline for the park is ambitious, Dinkle and local leaders are convinced that the time for this type of progressive project is now – and that Hagerstown is the place.

“Green, sustainable development isn’t something that’s off in the future; it’s here today,” he says. “New businesses want to locate in facilities that are green and energy-efficient – places that promote stewardship of the environment.”