
Ghana Tech Hub to Link Korean Innovation with Africa
A 1,000-acre smart technology park near Ghana's capital will create over 100,000 jobs while connecting Korean companies with African markets. The Vilacesti project aims to become operational within a decade, blending education, AI, and manufacturing innovation.
A massive technology park in Ghana is setting the stage for a powerful partnership between South Korean innovation and Africa's rising markets.
Victor Lawrence, founder of the Vilacesti smart industrial park project, recently secured 1,000 acres near Accra, Ghana's capital. His vision combines AI-driven technologies, advanced manufacturing, startup incubation, and research collaboration to position Africa for the industries of tomorrow.
The project's centerpiece is a "Korea Technology Town" designed specifically to help Korean companies enter African markets. Small and medium enterprises will find support from initial market entry through supply chain integration and local partnerships.
Lawrence, a Ghanaian engineer, spent years watching his continent rely on raw material exports and foreign aid. His travels to South Korea showed him a different path forward.
"Korea's story is one of vision, discipline, education, innovation and long-term national commitment," Lawrence said. "One of the most important lessons from Korea is that human capital matters more than natural resources."

That lesson drives his entire approach. Rather than repeating past development models, Lawrence wants to build a smarter, more connected future that leverages what both regions do best.
The Ripple Effect
The numbers tell a compelling story about scale and ambition. Within 10 years, Vilacesti expects to create more than 100,000 jobs while driving Ghana's industrial transformation and broader economic growth.
But the impact reaches beyond employment figures. The park will combine research facilities, innovation centers, and business infrastructure into one ecosystem where ideas can flourish and companies can grow.
Korean firms bring extraordinary experience in industrialization, technology, education, and infrastructure development. African partners contribute youthful energy, rapidly growing markets, creativity, and enormous future potential.
Lawrence sees this exchange as mutually beneficial rather than one-sided. "Korea and Africa have much to offer one another," he said, emphasizing that collaboration forms the foundation of the Vilacesti model.
The project team is actively building relationships with stakeholders in both countries while expanding discussions with potential investors and partners. Their goal is creating a practical landing platform where Korean companies of all sizes can establish their African presence.
This bridge between continents represents more than business opportunity—it shows how sharing knowledge and resources can lift entire regions toward prosperity.
Based on reporting by Regional: south korea technology (KR)
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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