Microsoft’s Premier Engineering Hub, The African Development Centre (ADC) Launches The Microsoft Garage, Relocates To Dunhill Towers

Microsoft's Premier Engineering Hub, The African Development Centre (ADC) Launches The Microsoft Garage, Relocates To Dunhill Towers

Microsoft’s premier engineering hub, the African Development Centre (ADC), is relocating to its own offices in Nairobi to Dunhill Towers along Waiyaki Way in its new ultra-modern state-of-the-art facility, the first of its kind serving the East African region.

Affirming the company’s commitment to the continent, the ultra-modern Microsoft engineering facility is the 1st of its kind serving the East Africa region, and will house over 450 fulltime employees as it seeks to train, equip and hire engineering talent as developers come up with cutting edge technologies that will solve the problems we have in the world today.

Microsoft's Premier Engineering Hub, The African Development Centre (ADC) Launches The Microsoft Garage, Relocates To Dunhill Towers
L-R Microsoft Corporate Vice President Joy Chik and Microsoft Africa Development Centre Managing Director, Jack Ngare address press during the opening of the ADC Offices at Dunhill Towers, Westlands, Nairobi

Since its inception in Nairobi in 2019, the ADC has grown to over 450 full-time employees working in areas such as software engineering, machine learning, data science, market research, infrastructure, and much more.

ADC Managing Director, Jack Ngare said: “One of our proud achievements in developing this facility was during the construction phase when we hired over 100 builders, artisans, architects, artists, craftsmen, women groups, and other skilled and unskilled workers, all during the height of the COVID pandemic. In addition, most of the construction materials were locally sourced thus ploughing back into the economy. We anticipate more employment will be created in the future, both in the day-today running of the facility and to staff the various community engagements that will take place.”

Microsoft's Premier Engineering Hub, The African Development Centre (ADC) Launches The Microsoft Garage, Relocates To Dunhill TowersThe facility was built in a similar style to Microsoft’s global offices to optimize space utilization, air conditioning, and lighting adjustments as part of Microsoft’s global ambition to be net carbon negative by 2030. There will also be self-heating windows, a mini solar plant to power the facility, and a water treatment facility to recycle and purify the water, which are not yet available in other Microsoft offices but are available at the new ADC facility.

“The facility will continue our efforts towards training, equipping and hiring engineering talent in Kenya and Africa as whole to contribute to the development of Microsoft products that are in use by over 1 billion devices and empowering millions of users and organizations across the world to do more,” Ngare added. The Nairobi-based centre was launched days after the ADC Nigeria which serves the West African region.

Speaking about The Garage, Lydia Karanja, its lead for Kenya said: “The Garage in Kenya will help Microsoft employees, customers and developers tap into their creative prowess to come up with cutting edge technologies that will solve the problems we have in the world today. I can’t wait to see the next big thing coming out of Africa.’’

The Garage is structured as a freeform workspace where Microsoft employees, interns, schools, and community groups can find the tools and training they need to launch products and learn skills. “The Garage is meant to spread the values of openness and collaboration throughout the Microsoft ADC, where people come to The Garage to work with interdisciplinary teams on passion projects that sometimes make their way into Microsoft products – this should ultimately allow Microsoft ADC to become a more prominent shaper of Africa’s tech culture,” Karanja explained.

Projects born out of Garages around the world include an app that uses artificial intelligence to narrate what a smartphone camera is seeing to visually impaired users. Another project used AI to build a platform hospitals and doctors can use to communicate with patients, including automated symptom checkers and health plan information. The Garage has locations in Boston, Vancouver, Israel, India, and China.

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