According to a June 17 presentation, Fort Worth is competing with El Paso, Nashville and Fremont, California, for the plant.
FORT WORTH, Texas — This article was originally published by our content partners at the Dallas Business Journal. You can read the original article here.
Fort Worth City Council on June 24 approved tax breaks for a tech manufacturer it’s attempting to lure to the city.
Wistron Corp. a Taiwan-based electronics manufacturer, aims to open two new Fort Worth operations to support artificial intelligence giant Nvidia‘s effort to build supercomputers.
Wistron is considering two sites totaling 62.5 acres: one at 15200 Heritage Pkwy. and another at 14601 Mobility Way. The company indicated it would invest $80 million in the property and $411 million in equipment at the 324,598-square-foot building on Heritage Parkway, which appears to be part of Trammell Crow Co.’s 35 Eagle industrial campus. According to a June 17 presentation, Fort Worth is competing with El Paso, Nashville and Fremont, California for the plant.
According to a past presentation by the city’s Economic Development Department, Wistron Corp.’s two factories could generate 888 full-time jobs with a minimum annual average salary of $63,000 by the end of 2026.
