Got ESRI?

When it comes to Geographical Information Systems (GIS), a local Redlands company — Environmental Systems Research Institute (ESRI) — is the industry leader. Their software is the backbone behind many mapping programs including those that are Internet-based. Even so, many local residents barely know the company even exists:

ESRI, the biggest local company you probably never heard of, extends its reach around the world from its tree-lined office complex in Redlands.

… With an estimated $469 million in revenue in 2002 and a dominant share of the market, ESRI is often called “the Microsoft of GIS.” The company is privately held by co-founders Jack and Laura Dangermond, has no debt and has never laid off anyone for financial reasons, company officials say.

Riverside Press-Enterprise – December 14, 2003
2024 - Logo ESRI

Founded in Redlands in 1969, the privately-held company is also headed by very private-minded owners, one of which is a 1963 graduate of Redlands High School:

Jack Dangermond, Class of 1963, isn’t even the best-known guy from his high school, despite starting a company in his mid-20s that now leads the world in the expanding field of geographic information systems. His company helps determine everything from how soon Sears will deliver your new refrigerator to which house you may end up buying.

Dangermond has never been a public person, and the success of his company has not changed that, said Leon Armantrout, a Redlands architect who designed most of ESRI’s growing campus. Dangermond and his wife, Laura, the company’s co-founder, focus their energy on ESRI rather than the social circuit.

Riverside Press-Enterprise – December 14, 2003

Related

  • Riverside Press-Enterprise – Redlands-based software firm leads the way in use of geographic information systems (Dec. 14) | Private citizen as global problem-solver (Dec. 14) | High-tech ESRI’s founder remains true to `my little’ blue-collar town (Dec. 14)
  • ESRI.com

Sources: Riverside Press-Enterprise (PE-20031214); NOTE: Published dates for some online versions of newspaper articles cited may not match their archival source date.

2024 PAGE UPDATE: Added newspaper citation/insert; added additional context; removed outdated links to newspaper articles; added link to ESRI website to Related content; added ESRI logo.

Similar Posts

  • March ARB to lose DHL

    Barely 3 years into operations, cargo shipper DHL is closing its west coast hub at March Air Reserve Base near Riverside. The closing comes as the German-based shipper pulls out of the U.S. domestic cargo market. The final flights at March are expected by the end of January 2009. DHL Officials with both March Global…

  • |

    Diverse plants, scenery at UC Riverside’s Botanic Gardens

    Note: The following write-up by us on UCR’s Botanic Gardens first appeared on Things To Do InlandEmpire.com. Nestled within 40 hilly acres on the eastern edge of the University of California at Riverside campus, the UCR Botanic Gardens is one of the Inland region’s best-kept secrets. With four miles of self-guided walking paths and over…

  • Growing young

    Thanks to tens of thousands of retirees, most of whom flocked to the area during the 1960s through the 1980s, Hemet once had one of the highest savings account averages in California: … Because of the large number of retirees who move to Hemet — with their savings accounts — the town has 24 savings…

  • Mixed-use projects picking up steam

    Activity has picked up recently at 2 of 3 mixed-use projects under development in downtown Riverside, which will be the first combined residential/commercial projects within the city in several decades. At Raincross Promenade, bounded by First, Third, Main and Market streets, site clearing is well under way. Situated near the city’s convention center at Raincross…

  • |

    Renovated Riverside Convention Center reopens

    After several years of planning and 1.5 years of reconstruction, the doors swung open March 1 on the extensively renovated Riverside Convention Center in downtown. Located at the northern end of the Main Street pedestrian mall at Fifth Street, the convention center began life in 1976 as Ben H. Lewis Hall at Raincross Square. It…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.