PROGRAM OVERVIEW
The NY SMART I-Corridor: What It Is and How CNY Businesses Can Access It
A $40 million federally funded Tech Hub spanning Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse. It runs three active programs — for manufacturers, employers, and startups — that are open to CNY businesses right now.
What It Is
The NY SMART I-Corridor (New York Semiconductor Manufacturing and Research Technology Innovation Corridor) is a federally designated Tech Hub spanning the Buffalo–Rochester–Syracuse–Ithaca region. In July 2024, it received a $40 million implementation grant from the U.S. Department of Commerce’s Economic Development Administration — making it one of only 12 Tech Hubs nationally to receive federal implementation funding.
The corridor is led by CenterState CEO, the Buffalo Niagara Partnership, and OneROC, and is backed by a coalition of more than 100 organizations including Micron, major universities, manufacturers, and community organizations. Its mandate: build the infrastructure, workforce, and supply chain that positions Upstate New York to produce one in four American-made semiconductors by 2034.
For CNY businesses, the Corridor isn’t an abstract regional initiative — it’s a set of three specific programs with real money and direct business support attached.
The Three Programs
1. SCAN — Supply Chain Activation Network
For: Manufacturers and industrial businesses
Led by the University at Buffalo, SCAN helps existing manufacturers assess their capabilities, identify gaps, and integrate into the semiconductor supply chain. It scales capacity at regional Manufacturing Extension Partnerships (MEPs) and connects firms with purchasing opportunities. If you make physical products and want to know whether and how you fit into the supply chain, SCAN is your starting point. The University at Buffalo hosts a biannual convening — “Bridging the Gap” — connecting suppliers directly with semiconductor manufacturers and resource providers.
2. STEP UP — Semiconductor Talent & Employer Partnership Upstate New York
For: Employers building semiconductor talent pipelines
Led by Monroe Community College, STEP UP is described as a “unified front door” for employers to access semiconductor talent. It addresses a projected gap of more than 10,000 semiconductor jobs by 2034 — including 5,000 middle-skill roles like processing technicians, 4,000 construction jobs, and 2,500 high-skill engineering positions. Employers partner with STEP UP to develop training programs, connect to apprenticeship pipelines, and recruit from historically underserved communities. An ON-RAMP training center has been established in downtown Syracuse specifically to serve this mission.
3. C3 — Commercialization & Collaboration Center
For: Startups, small businesses, and R&D companies
Led by Syracuse University, C3 helps startups and small businesses — particularly minority-owned and women-owned firms — access university lab equipment, prototyping spaces, R&D expertise, and commercialization support. C3 has funded approximately 30 minority and women-owned businesses to access lab and prototyping spaces through its voucher program. The NY THRIVE Innovation Voucher Program is the main access point, offering grants from under $50,000 (no match required) to over $250,000 (25% match required) for companies using I-Corridor facilities and expertise.
NY THRIVE Innovation Vouchers (C3)
The NY THRIVE program is worth calling out specifically because it represents direct grant money available to businesses right now. Vouchers can be used to access university labs, specialized equipment, maker spaces, and research assistance across the corridor.
| Tier | Amount | Match Required | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | Up to $50,000 | None | Equipment testing, early-stage prototyping |
| Tier 2 | $50,001–$250,000 | 10% | Product development, extended testing |
| Tier 3 | Over $250,000 | 25% | Long-term R&D, deep collaboration |
Applicants must be senior representatives (CEO, CTO, or R&D leaders) from companies involved in semiconductor design, manufacturing, technology development, or related sectors. Projects must use facilities or expertise from a participating university, nonprofit, or industry partner within the corridor.
How to Get Involved
The simplest entry point is nysmarticorridor.com. The site has a contact form where you provide your name and business information, and a partner economic development organization — typically CenterState CEO for Syracuse-area businesses — follows up to assess your fit and connect you to the right program.
For manufacturers specifically, reaching out to CenterState CEO directly is the fastest path to connecting with SCAN and the MEP resources. For employers building workforce pipelines, contact the STEP UP program through Monroe Community College. For startups and R&D companies, contact Syracuse University’s commercialization team to learn about C3 and NY THRIVE.
Key Resources
- NY SMART I-Corridor Website — contact form, program descriptions, and updates
- CenterState CEO — primary business network for CNY companies accessing Corridor programs
- NY THRIVE Innovation Voucher Program — apply for C3 innovation vouchers
This guide reflects program information available as of March 2026. Program availability and funding are subject to change. Verify current program status at nysmarticorridor.com.