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The city that says yes: Why AI firm is investing in Manchester and why more Irish firms may follow

Galvia AI is opening an office and a tech accelerator programme in Manchester

Galvia’s CEO and founder John Clancy launching his Manchester office plans(Image: Alistair Houghton)

Irish firm Galvia AI has launched in Manchester – and the firm says the city’s positive attitude to investment made it a clear choice for a first º£½ÇÊÓÆµ hub.

The business is opening a base at the Turing Innovation Catalyst (TIC), within Manchester city centre’s newly-christened £1.7bn science and technology district Sister.

The Galway company is also launching an AI accelerator programme in Manchester to encourage dozens of local small businesses to make more use of AI.

Asked why the firm picked Manchester, Galvia CEO and founder John Clancy told BusinessLive that he had received great support from leading figures in tech and business locally – including from city council leader Bev Craig and from TIC Manchester boss Liz Scott.

The TIC’s recent Greater Manchester AI Catalyst Report showed the region has the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest AI cluster outside London, with its AI companies now worth a total of £3.1bn.

He said: “The people in the ecosystem here, the likes of Liz Scott, Bev Craig, the team in Midas, the team at Manchester Digital, Enterprise Ireland… it's their support from the start. This seems to be a city that comes from a position of yes.

“But also the wider people here – there are over 100,000 students in the city. We're looking at double digit hires in the next 12 to 18 months – that talent pool is already here.

“And you also have 13 and a half thousand people working in the tech sector here in Manchester. So it's an ideal hub from a people perspective.”