Tech Parks Arizona was created in 1994 following the purchase of a former
IBM campus by the University of Arizona. The site evolved into the UA Tech Park, a hub for technology development in Southern Arizona. IBM's storage division has remained a tenant since the park's founding, advancing magnetic tape storage technologies. In that same year, the UA Tech Park marked its 30th year as a Tucson tech hub. In 2010, Vail Academy and High School became the nation's first K–12 institution located on a university research park, setting a national precedent for integrating education and innovation.
Role in the Space Shuttle Challenger investigation (1986) After the
Space Shuttle Challenger disaster in 1986, data recovery efforts took place at what is now the UA Tech Park at Rita Road. The site was then IBM's Tucson Storage Division, a center for magnetic-tape and data storage research. NASA sent flight-recorder tapes recovered from the Atlantic Ocean to the IBM facility, where engineers conducted one of the most difficult data-recovery operations in history. In specialized cleanrooms, IBM scientists used chemical baths, custom machinery, and manual handling to separate and restore the saltwater-damaged tapes. Their work recovered most of the mission's recorded data, including key telemetry that supported the federal investigation. The event demonstrated the Tucson facility's engineering expertise and remains a key part of its technological legacy before becoming Tech Parks Arizona. ==Facilities==