T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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529.1 | RECO | CVG::THOMPSON | Let's move Engineering to Florida | Fri May 06 1988 11:52 | 11 |
| There is a group called RECO (Real Estate and Construction Organization
I think) that handles most of the real estate (buy, rent, lease)
and renovation work for the company. They do a lot of the planning
for all purchases of land and buildings. They also get involved
in construction and remodeling of facilities. I believe that anyone
who needs a new plant works with them to pick location etc.
They have several lines in the DEC phone book under Property
Development.
Alfred
|
529.2 | | CASEE::VANDENHEUVEL | Hein, Valbonne."_mm_/���\_mm_ | Mon May 09 1988 07:02 | 12 |
| > I'm sure there are many criterion for DEC to consider when locating
> a site in a town or city or even state.
or even a country....
Many governements are big customers. They play games:
We buy 100M$ or more of your stuff if You create 100 jobs in Our country.
|
529.3 | location of employees | FSTTOO::FOSTER | Frank Foster -- Cincinnati Kid | Wed May 11 1988 18:12 | 6 |
| Another thing they look at when moving a facility is where the
employees of that facility live, so as to minimize the
number of people who will need relocation. This, apparantly,
is one of the reasons the new Training Center is going to
Boylston instead of Plymouth, or so I heard.
Frank
|
529.4 | Plymouth ?! Did You Say Plymouth ??!??! | BOSHOG::PARCELS | | Fri May 13 1988 12:26 | 6 |
| BUT WHAT IS GOING INTO PLYMOUTH ?
ANYTHING ?
Input would help quell commutational psychosis...thanks
|
529.5 | water and waste prob with Plymouth | NEWVAX::FILER | | Mon May 16 1988 10:07 | 6 |
| The word that I got on the large tract of land in Plymouth Ma.
is that they were looking for a place for FS and customer training
when they bought the land. Unfortunatly there are problems of no
water and waste removal. These problems, I was told, would cost
mega_bucks to overcome and therefore the land would not be developed.
|
529.6 | No title | VENOM::KING | Give me a Challenge | Thu May 19 1988 03:35 | 9 |
| I believe that the DEC land is on Beaver Dam Road and is down the road
from the town dump. Its one of the few landfills open in the area.
I heard that DEC decided not to locate a plant there is because
of Boston Edison. If I am correct about the location of the land,
then the transmission lines from Pilgrim run close to the property.
Bryan
|
529.7 | 6 Sq Miles in plymouth | FHQ::MAIELLANO | Murphy was an optimist! | Thu May 19 1988 15:13 | 7 |
| To put things in perspective, the land DEC owns in Plymouth
is larger in area than the town of Maynard. It is at Exit 3 off
Route 3 and is Beaver Dam Road. The land is on both sides of the
highway. There is an abundance of wildlife on the property. It
is also 15 minutes from my house.
jim
|
529.8 | {hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm} | BOSHOG::PARCELS | THIS SURE ISN'T KANSAS, TOTO ! | Thu May 19 1988 16:41 | 10 |
| re: .7 and others
OK..so DEC owns the land.....now....
how do we get uncle Ken to let us all work there,close to home?
If that's "food for thought", then I think I'm starving.....
Murphy wasn't an optimist - he was a damned Pollyanna.
|
529.9 | Please stick to the topic. | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Thu May 19 1988 21:18 | 8 |
| Can we please limit this topic to the discussion of *how* Digital
decides where to place facilities, and not a wishlist of *where*
Digital should place facilities? There are other topics dealing
with specific geographic locations.
Thank you.
(We now return you to your topic, already in progress.)
|
529.10 | How about it gang?? | XCUSME::KING | Give me a Challenge | Fri May 20 1988 02:52 | 5 |
| Since there seems to be alot of interest in a potential Plymouth
site, I'm taking the iniative by starting a new note in this conference
about Plymouth. See you all at the last note!!
Bryan
|
529.11 | Over there... Over there... | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney DTN 352.2157 | Fri May 20 1988 09:29 | 17 |
| Since we're not talking about Plymouth anymore, let's talk about where
they may have originally came from...
Digital along with several other US companies took some hits in the New
York Times today for increasing their foreign operations. The weak
dollar _was_ supposed to limit foreign manufacturing operations.
The semiconductor facility in Scotland is mentioned in the fourth
paragraph.
Digital is not quoted but our expansion in France and Taiwan our used
as examples that the US does not have a lock on high-tech manufacturing
capabilities.
NEW YORK TIMES May 20, 1988 page 1 column 1, "Overseas Spending by
US Companies Sets Record Pace"
|
529.12 | This sort of attitude destroys international harmony | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/K3 | Wed May 25 1988 07:16 | 34 |
| Re: .11
In general local operations in any country should be seen as a positive
benefit. Many organizations are much more likely to buy if the product is
locally produced. Some organizations (usually governments) insist on it.
Manufacturing in Europe (in the EC countries) is highly beneficial as it
gives tariff-free access to the whole of the EC. Also labour and transport
costs are lower than in the US. There are also tax breaks and other
financial incentives for setting up operations in some countries.
I believe that it is morally wrong for a company the size of Digital not to
source components and make as much product locally to its markets as
possible. Some countries force this by requiring local operations to be
set up to offset imports.
Digital is now of a size that it is really an International Company that
happens to have its headquarters in the US. It is no longer a US Company
that happens to have some foreign operations.
> ... the US does not have a lock on high-tech manufacturing capabilities.
This is nothing but good - why should it anyway? People who believe that
any one country should have a monopoly on technology (or most anything else
for that matter) should be shot. In any case it's not true. Japan for one
has independently developed highly advanced manufacturing that in some
sectors is ahead of all other countries.
Many people in power in the US were outraged by the shipment of machine
tools made by a Toshiba company to the USSR more because investigations
revealed that the technology involved was not of US origin but totally
Japanese than by the actual shipment having taken place.
jb
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529.13 | De Gustibus Non Est Disputandem | BOSHOG::PARCELS | Reality is a Crutch | Wed May 25 1988 15:42 | 6 |
| re:11,12
Whatever happened to good ol' colonial manifest destiny ?
|
529.14 | $$$ | JGO::FITZGERALD | Maurice FitzGerald @JGO | Fri May 27 1988 04:17 | 11 |
| re .12
Labour costs in Europe are no longer lower than in the US. Exchange
rate changes have made that ancient history. (Hint: Compare Swiss
and US salaries and cost of living!). According to a recently published
survey which appeared on the French TV news last week, the Germans
have now overtaken the Swiss as the top paid people in the world.
US salaries are 25% lower on average, French salaries 33% lower,
and UK salaries 50% lower!
Maurice
|