Maxim Integrated to spend €23m on new design centre at Irish base

Move by US computer chip maker could create up to 100 jobs

Maxim Integrated CTO David Dwelley;  Jason Pearce, head of the company’s new design centre in Dublin; IDA Ireland vice-president of Enterprise Technology Catherine Howard; Maxim chief executive Tunç Doluca; Maxim vice-president of global customer operations John Kirwan; and IDA Ireland head of enterprise technology Donal Travers.
Maxim Integrated CTO David Dwelley; Jason Pearce, head of the company’s new design centre in Dublin; IDA Ireland vice-president of Enterprise Technology Catherine Howard; Maxim chief executive Tunç Doluca; Maxim vice-president of global customer operations John Kirwan; and IDA Ireland head of enterprise technology Donal Travers.

US computer chip maker Maxim Integrated will spend more than €23 million on a new design centre at its Irish base that could create up to 100 jobs.

San José, California-based Maxim makes semiconductors – the microchips that drive digital equipment including computers and smartphones – and had sales of about €2 billion last year.

The multinational confirmed on Wednesday that it is investing $25 million (€23.16 million) on building a new design centre at its Irish subsidiary, in Clonskeagh, Dublin.

Maxim said it was recruiting engineers to staff the new facility. The US company did not put a final figure on the number of jobs the centre is likely to create, but it is thought to be between 80 and 100.

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The company explained that it would spend the $25 million mainly on recruiting workers, equipment and building the design centre, which will be the seventh such facility that Maxim has opened in Europe.

John Kirwan, Maxim Integrated's vice-president of global customer operations, said he was "thrilled" that the company had chosen Dublin for its latest centre.

David Dwelley, the multinational's chief technology officer, said Maxim hoped to push innovation at the company "even further".

Martin Shanahan, chief executive of IDA Ireland, the State agency responsible for attracting multinationals such as Maxim to the Republic, said he was delighted the company had chosen to locate its design centre here.

"Tech talent and investment are integral to the company's continued growth, and this investment will enhance the technology offering in the engineering and design space in Ireland, " Mr Shanahan added.

Official figures released this week show that high-tech companies in the Republic employed more than 127,000 people by the end of last year.

They hired 12,000 new workers between the last quarter of 2018 and the same period in 2019.

Both the Central Bank and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development pointed out recently that technology and pharmaceuticals were leading Irish export growth.

Maxim began trading in the early 1980s and floated on the New York Stock Exchange towards the end of that decade. It is an S&P 500 company and employs more than 7,000 people.

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O'Halloran

Barry O’Halloran covers energy, construction, insolvency, and gaming and betting, among other areas