10 million euros in funding for UNITE – Startup Factory Berlin-Brandenburg

© Adobe Stock

UNITE – Startup Factory Berlin-Brandenburg has been recognised by the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy as one of ten nationwide flagship projects for science-based start-ups. UNITE is to be established as a central transfer platform for technology-driven spin-offs from science and industry in the capital region. The Helmholtz Centre Berlin will also benefit from this.

The award for the flagship project comes with funding of up to 10 million euros over five years. Private investors had already pledged an additional 10 million euros in advance, with another 10 million euros coming from the VC Pre-Seed Fund. This gives the project a strong financial foundation (a total of 30 million euros) for UNITE and future deep tech start-ups in the capital region.

The Berlin University Alliance – consisting of Freie Universität Berlin, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Technische Universität Berlin and Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin – has been instrumental in establishing UNITE e.V. and will now work alongside a broad-based consortium to strategically and sustainably expand knowledge transfer in Berlin-Brandenburg. Important impetus for the conception and design of UNITE came from "Science & Start-ups" – the joint start-up centre of the BUA universities.

The HZB will be more closely integrated into Berlin's start-up landscape

For the Berlin-Brandenburg region, the participation of the Berlin Excellence Network is an important step that will significantly strengthen and structure the knowledge and innovation space. The Helmholtz Centre Berlin also benefits as a partner in the UNITE project. This gives employees easier access to support services for innovation and transfer from the Berlin University Alliance and other UNITE partners.

"One particular advantage is that the Helmholtz Centre Berlin will be even more firmly and sustainably anchored in Berlin's start-up landscape. Where creative minds come together, new ideas and networks for their realisation emerge," says Dr. Paul Harten, Head of Technology Transfer at HZB. He emphasises that the joint collaboration in UNITE will enable more innovation in and from research.

Focus on AI, health and green technologies

The aim is to structurally strengthen innovation pathways between research and application beyond traditional technology transfer and to bring forth a new generation of technology-driven start-ups from science. The focus will be on artificial intelligence, health and green technologies.

 

(sz/red.)

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • AI-driven Catalyst Discovery: €30 million funding for German consortium
    News
    30.03.2026
    AI-driven Catalyst Discovery: €30 million funding for German consortium
    Six partners from research and industry, including Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), the Fritz-Haber-Institute of the Max Planck Society (FHI), BASF, Dunia Innovations, Siemens Energy, and the Technical University Berlin are launching a joint project to accelerate the catalyst discovery. The German Federal Ministry for Science, Technology and Space (BMFTR) is providing €30 million in funding for ASCEND (Accelerated Solutions for Catalysis using Emerging Nanotechnology and Digital Innovation). The research initiative targets the defossilisation of energy-intensive industries while safeguarding industrial competitiveness, with a focus on the chemical sector. The five-year project will start on 1st April 2026.
  • Kick-off for a new data and AI centre in Berlin
    News
    27.03.2026
    Kick-off for a new data and AI centre in Berlin
    By establishing a new data and AI centre in Berlin, the Zuse Institute Berlin (ZIB) and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB) are laying the foundations for a scalable and sovereign data infrastructure in the capital. The project strengthens the scientific capabilities of Berlin’s research community whilst making an important contribution to research security, resilience and technological independence.

  • Berlin Battery Lab: BAM, HZB and HU are conducting joint research on sodium batteries
    News
    19.03.2026
    Berlin Battery Lab: BAM, HZB and HU are conducting joint research on sodium batteries
    The Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing (BAM), the Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin (HZB) and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (HU) today officially inaugurated the Berlin Battery Lab (BBL). At this new research platform, BAM, HZB and HU jointly develop and test resource-efficient battery technologies with a focus on sodium-based systems. Together, they develop new materials, investigate innovative cell chemistries, and produce battery prototypes. The research infrastructure of the Berlin Battery Lab is also open to external partners from science and industry and is designed to accelerate the transfer from research to application.