State, county, city announce 'leap of faith' quantum computing facility
in Chicago
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[July 26, 2024]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – The State of Illinois, Cook County and the city of
Chicago have announced that the new Illinois Quantum and
Microelectronics Park will be built on former U.S. Steel property on
Chicago’s Southeast Side.
The South Works site has been mostly dormant since the mill closed in
1992. In opening the announcement of the project Thursday, and to the
backing by taxpayers, Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker called it a "leap of
faith."
"The General Assembly understood that we had a great opportunity but
they also knew that making an investment of this kind can be
groundbreaking and was something that was timely and important to do
right now," Pritzker said.
Illinois Senate President Don Harmon, D-Oak Park, said the legislature
has prioritized fiscal stability, connecting the power of the past with
the promise of the future.
“And here we are: we’ve gone from chaos to quantum. How’s that for a
turnaround agenda?” Harmon asked.
The Illinois General Assembly allotted $700 million of taxpayer funds
for the quantum park. The city of Chicago and Cook County are each
kicking in $5 million from taxpayers.
County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said a government reflects its
values by how and where it invests its tax dollars and resources.
“Today’s historic announcement reflects a significant commitment by
state and local units of government to a neighborhood, a community of
color, that has long been marginalized and is overdue for genuine
investment,” Preckwinkle said.
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A rendering of the planned PsiQuantum facility in Chicago. -
Courtesy of Lamar Johnson Collaborative
PsiQuantum is the company selected to anchor the site, with
incentives from state, county and city governments.
According to a statement from PsiQuantum, the package of incentives
is worth more than $500 million over 30 years. The company’s
headquarters are located in Palo Alto, California.
PsiQuantum CEO Jeremy O’Brien said the Chicago facility will be the
fulcrum of a new innovation community.
“These systems will allow us to simulate, calculate and understand
the behavior of materials, chemistry, physics and information at a
level that no conventional computer will ever rival,” O’Brien said.
The University of Illinois will work along with the University of
Chicago, the University of Illinois Chicago and Northwestern
University on the build-out of the project. U of I Chancellor Robert
J. Jones compared the development with the invention of the
internet, the visible LED or the MRI.
“I challenge you to imagine a societal change at scale and speed
even bigger than those three examples,” Jones said.
Officials said they hope to have the facility up and running in
2027.
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