BHV history

From an incubator to a technology cluster

The story of Business Hive Vilnius — from a physical startup incubator to a virtual technology cluster and mentorship network.

2010

Founding

Business Hive Vilnius (BHV) was founded in 2010 and became one of the oldest startup incubators and technology hubs in the Baltics. Alongside it, the association “Užupis Creative Cluster” (UCC) was established — operating in information and communication technologies (ICT), creative industries, cybersecurity and research.

2015

A physical hub and growth

In 2015 the BHV headquarters opened — a modern central building housing a welcoming, highly effective startup ecosystem. The headquarters comprised over 2,000 sqm of office, conference, networking and prototyping space. It incubated startups from Lithuania, CEE and the CIS, hosted a hacker space, events, pitching sessions and mentorship programs.

2018

Lithuanian ICT Cluster

The cluster was renamed from “Užupis Creative Cluster” to “Lithuanian ICT Cluster”, reflecting a broader focus on the information and communication technology sector.

2020–2021

The Covid-19 challenge

2020 brought hard times worldwide — the Covid-19 pandemic fundamentally changed how physical coworking spaces operated. With reduced footfall and changing work habits, maintaining a large physical infrastructure became unsustainable. In 2021, BHV made a difficult but responsible decision — to scale down activities, close the physical hub, and sell the building.

2021–2022

Transformation

Rather than shutting down, BHV transformed. Physical services gave way to a virtual format: remote mentorship, expert consultations, and cluster projects. Startup support continues virtually, with focus shifted to where BHV creates the most value — connecting the technology community and fostering international collaboration.

2022–2024

The EXCITE partnership

The BHV cluster took part in the European Commission-funded project “Exchange of Clusters using Digital Transformation for Excellence” (EXCITE) — alongside Germany’s Silicon Saxony, Poland’s Mazovia Cluster ICT, Bulgaria’s Cluster for Digital Transformation and Innovations, Spain’s GAIA, and France’s Pôle SCS. Over two years, missions took place in Dresden, Warsaw, Sofia and Bilbao, exchanging expertise in digital transformation and cybersecurity.

Today

The cluster survived — and is growing

Most importantly — the BHV cluster not only survived, it grew stronger. On 31 January 2024 it earned the European Cluster Excellence Initiative’s ECEI Bronze Label, confirming the organization operates to European quality standards. Today BHV works as a technology cluster and virtual mentorship network, connecting startups, experts and partners — with a focus on cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and digital transformation.

Since 2010, BHV’s mission hasn’t changed — helping technology businesses grow. Only the form has: from bricks and mortar to a living, virtual, international community.