Silicon Glen is a nickname for the high tech sector of Scotland. More usually
applied to the Scottish Central belt between Dundee, Greenock, the Lothians and including Stirling,
Edinburgh, Glasgow and Fife. It does not represent a Glen as it covers a much wider area than
just one valley, however the name was probably adapted from Silicon Valley and has been in
use in Scotland since the 1980s.
History
Silicon Glen had its origins in the electronics business with IBM being one of the first
companies to set up when it established a manufacturing base in Greenock in 1951. Indeed
this was typical of much of the early days of Silicon Glen, which were dominated by electronics
manufacturing for foreign companies much more than software development or home grown companies.
The emphasis on electronics came about due to the decline in traditional
Scottish heavy industries such as steel and mining. The government development agencies saw electronics manufacturing as being a positive replacement for people made redundant through
heavy industry closures and the associated training and reskilling was fairly easy to achieve.
There were some notable sucesses from this invesment, such as the large Sun Microsystems
plant in Linlithgow and the Digital Equipment Corporation manufacturing plant in
South Queensferry where the pioneering 64 bit Alpha processor was made. Digital also started
an office in Livingston developing their flagship VAX/VMS operating
system.
Today
The heavy dependency on electronics manufacturing hit Silicon Glen hard after the collapse of
the hi-tech economy in 2000. Viasystems, National Semiconductor, Motorola and Chunghwa all
laid off substantial numbers of employees or closed factories completely. Digital sold their
Alpha facility to Motorola who eventually closed it down. Motorola also closed their factory in
Bathgate and the substantial NEC plant in Livingston was also closed.
However, there are many promising signs as well as a recognition that diversification
away from electronics and manufacturing produces a more balanced and stronger economy. There
is also more of an interest in encouraging home grown talent.
In order to diversify away from electronics and manufacturing, the development agencies now
see Call Centres as being an area of growth, but there is also substantial interest in the
computer games market including Rockstar_North, developers of the market leading Grand Theft Auto
series. There is still a focus on electronic design, spearheaded by the Alba Campus. However, the software sector has significantly attracted Amazon.com to set up a software development centre in Edinburgh, the first such centre outside the US.
Notable companies
Many high technology companies are established in Silicon Glen, including:
Sun Microsystems, Motorola, Agilent, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle Corporation, Cadence Design Systems, 3Com, Adobe Systems and Atos Origin
Universities
External links