To bring breakthrough innovations in HealthTech and connected lighting, five-year alliance with MIT amounts to $ 25 million in total
Royal Philips has signed a five-year research alliance with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) aimed at developing innovative HealthTech solutions, as well as digital connected lighting systems to address the need to make cities more livable and sustainable.
With a total budget of $25 million for the five-year term, this is the largest research alliance undertaken by the company in the region. This also includes moving the company’s research centre to Cambridge, Mass, allowing Philips to collaborate with other leading-edge institutes and partner companies. The move to Cambridge, within close proximity of the MIT campus, will allow Philips researchers to collaborate readily with MIT faculty and Ph.D students on jointly defined research programmes, as well as participate in open innovation projects.
Reportedly, joint teams will work on advancements in HealthTech, for example to help improve the management of cardiovascular disease and the diagnosis and treatment of various types of cancer, focused on improving patient outcomes, while reducing costs. Through the alliance, Philips will gain access to MIT’s experts and clinical partners, allowing the company to better explore applications for population health management through the use of patient-centric, high-resolution imaging, healthcare informatics and data analytics.
In lighting, the collaboration will explore the advancement of energy-efficient lighting systems and services for densely populated cities. Philips recently announced unique innovations in connected, cloud-based LED lighting for the city of Los Angeles and the New NY Bridge across the Hudson River in New York, and will explore new ways to exploit the digitisation of lighting.
“The Boston area is rich with innovative talent that is regularly applying new thinking to solving big societal issues and developing disruptive technologies that can address those issues in new ways; it’s a culture and vision that is very much in line with that of Philips,” said Henk van Houten, Global Head of Philips Research. “By moving to Cambridge and collaborating with MIT, its staff and its partners, Philips can work with some of the best minds in the world on healthcare delivery, looking at ways to better prevent, manage or treat common diseases across the health continuum. In addition, we will explore advancements in connected lighting systems that can improve energy-efficiency, safety, productivity and quality of people’s daily lives,” he added.
“Kendall Square is a vibrant innovation ecosystem, and I am thrilled that Philips will further enhance the diversity of commercial market segments located adjacent to campus,” said MIT Associate Provost Karen Gleason. “Working in close proximity, the Institute’s researchers and experts at Philips will endeavour to develop new digital and health technologies that address key challenges in wellness and urban living. Through industrial alliances like this one, we also hope to ramp up the speed with which we move new technologies from the lab to impact,” she stated.