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By late spring, surf will be up at Atlantic Park on the former site of The Dome, Virginia Beach’s distinctive geodesic dome convention center and concert hall that was torn down in 1994.

Atlantic Park, a $350 million mixed-use entertainment venue and surf lagoon project at the Oceanfront, is the highest profile project in the Hampton Roads area, and it’s scheduled to open in May 2025 — partly due to the backing of music and fashion superstar Pharrell Williams, who grew up near the site — but there are other big developments on the horizon.

Atlantic Park shares a theme with other notable projects, including improvements to the Half Moone Cruise Terminal and Norfolk International Airport. They’re designed to raise the region’s international profile and attract new visitors. Meanwhile, improvement plans for other sites — including Fort Monroe in Hampton and MacArthur Center mall and the former Military Circle Mall in Norfolk — continue to run into obstacles.

Atlantic Park, approved in 2019 by Virginia Beach City Council and funded with $153 million in public money, has faced its own challenges — including funding delays — and earlier this year, groundwater containing high levels of iron and arsenic from the project’s lagoon excavation flowed into nearby Lake Holly. Ultimately, the project’s Virginia Beach-based developer, Venture Realty Group, removed the chemicals in March, allowing work to progress.

By May 2025, planners expect it will be time for visitors to get into the water at the 11.5-acre plot between 18th and 20th streets and Pacific and Baltic avenues. The development will feature a 3,500-seat indoor entertainment venue with room for an additional 1,500 people outdoors, as well as retail, restaurants, parking garages, apartments and 10,000 square feet of office space. But the attraction unique to the area will be the 2.67-acre surf lagoon.

Chuck Rigney, who stepped down as Virginia Beach’s director of economic development in late July amid a city investigation into his travel expenses, said earlier in July that Atlantic Park’s first phase — including the lagoon — was scheduled to open in late spring 2025.

“This is as significant a project as it gets, and it’s going to be a catalyst for redevelopment all in that area,” Rigney said, noting that the infrastructure upgrades will create development opportunities in the area. “It’s going to have an effect on a lot more development down there of, hopefully, a signature-type caliber, so we can raise the profile of Virginia Beach into more of an internationally known city.”

By land, air or water

Along Norfolk’s downtown waterfront, another project appealing to tourists is under construction at the city-owned Half Moone Cruise and Celebration Center. To prepare for weekly cruises by the 12-deck Carnival Sunshine ship beginning in February 2025, the terminal is demolishing its small escalator and building a sloped circular ramp to make exiting and boarding more efficient for an estimated 3,000 passengers per cruise. Customs stations are also being improved by introducing mobile kiosks.

Another project scheduled for completion in fall 2025 will be enclosing a terrace to create an air-conditioned seating space for 600 passengers waiting to board.

Nauticus Executive Director Stephen Kirkland, who also manages the cruise terminal, forecasts 300,000 passengers will move through Norfolk annually starting
in 2025. Carnival’s marketing to fill the ship weekly will increase drawing passengers from a wider area. “It’s a game changer for us and for the community,” he says, noting that passengers will fly or drive in a day or so early to be sure to make their cruise.

“That’s a big opportunity for us as a community,” he adds. “These guests really will be coming from much further afield, all across the mid-Atlantic and beyond, and they will, many of them, be staying with us the day before and the day after.”

Cruise passengers flying into Norfolk will also discover new amenities as Norfolk International Airport responds to dramatically increased demand growing by about a half-million passengers annually — from 4.1 million passengers two years ago to a projected 5 million this year.

Norfolk International, notes airport Executive Director and CEO Mark Perryman, hasn’t had major improvements other than upgrading parking structures in more than two decades. “What we’re doing now is modernizing the existing airport,” he says. “We’re redeveloping it in a manner that will re-life the airport for the next 25, 30 years.”

Several reasons are behind the increased demand. During the pandemic, people outside the area discovered the Outer Banks, Virginia Beach and Norfolk beaches when they couldn’t go to other vacation destinations, Perryman notes, and those traditionally drive-to locations became fly-to locations. Additionally, he says, the rebound in business travel also has contributed to higher traffic.

Norfolk International Airport Executive Director and CEO Mark Perryman anticipates that the addition of three gates at Concourse A will be finished in November. Photo by Mark Rhodes

At the airport, an addition of three gates to Concourse A is expected to be finished by November, as well as a new customs and border patrol facility that is likely to attract more international flights. By mid-2025, a new moving walkway connecting parking decks is expected to be operational, and a 165-room Courtyard Marriott with restaurants and a fitness center next to the departures building is due in early 2026. Perryman says those projects combined will cost about $80 million.

Further down the line is a new $400 million departures terminal, likely to break ground in 2026, and a $200 million rental car facility scheduled for a 2025 groundbreaking.

The airport is on a solid financial foundation, Perryman says, with a preliminary estimate of $98 million in total revenue for fiscal 2024, up from $77.7 million in 2023.

No local money subsidizes the airport, although it does receive relatively small grants from the state and federal governments. Also, the Courtyard Marriott’s developers are bringing their own financing, and rental car companies are doing the same for their on-site facilities at the airport.

“We are a growing, thriving airport, and that is good for the Hampton Roads region,” Perryman says. Chesapeake, Virginia Beach, and Norfolk supply most of the airport’s passenger traffic, but Norfolk International’s reach extends halfway up the Interstate 64 corridor to Richmond, west to Suffolk and Isle of Wight, and south to North Carolina.

Meanwhile, on the logistics front, Amazon.com is rolling forward with two large facilities in Virginia Beach, costing approximately $350 million and creating an estimated 1,000 jobs by 2025. A delivery station is expected to be open and in operation later this year in time for holiday deliveries, and a multistory, 650,000-square-foot fulfillment center is set to be open by mid-2025.

Real estate taxes on the facility will pay off the city’s investment of $22.5 million for a new road accommodating the two warehouses within 20 years, according to Rigney.

“Amazon, in the competitive world of home delivery, is trying to get the time that you buy a product to the time it gets onto your doorstep really shrunken down to within a two-hour time frame, so they need to be in closer proximity to major urban areas,” Rigney said in early July.

He noted there is an adjacent site that could accommodate 450,000 square feet of development. “If that was to come in,” he added, “it would represent another significant capital investment, real estate taxes and jobs, as well.”

Not quite there yet

Not all area projects are moving forward smoothly. In March, Norfolk Mayor Kenneth Alexander announced a redevelopment idea for the long-ailing MacArthur Center that would include a 400-room hotel, more than 500,000 square feet of high-rise apartments and a 2.5-acre pedestrian promenade with more than 172,000 square feet of retail space. But that vision is still more wish than reality.

Sean Washington, Norfolk’s economic development director, says no developer has been identified for the project, nor is there a financing plan. The city is investigating whether it makes economic sense.

“This is going to be a very large public-private partnership,” Washington says. “And so, with all the other major projects we have going on at the municipality, we really want to get a better understanding of what would we be able to properly invest back in the site, which we know is obviously high priority.”

The city, Washington adds, wants a better understanding of how to maximize tax generation and examine what economic development and financial tools it can use. A developer would not have a proposal until sometime in 2025, he says, and the project would be completed in phases, with the first construction phase lasting two to three years.

The overarching goal is to create an attraction, much like MacArthur was when it opened in 1999. “We really want this to be this premier mixed-use destination, not just for our city but also for the region,” Washington says.

Another Norfolk project that experienced false starts also faces an uncertain future. The former Military Circle Mall was purchased by the Norfolk Economic Development Authority for $13.4 million in 2020. Following decades in decline, the 97-acre shopping center closed completely in 2023 after 53 years in operation.

In 2021, the city issued a request for proposals to redevelop the mall site and received three proposals that officials gave further consideration — including some big names like Pharrell Williams, Virginia Beach hotel developer Bruce Thompson and NFL Hall of Famer and developer Emmitt Smith. Among the plans were new arenas, hotels, office space, residential buildings and retail.

Going back to 2016, when the city adopted its long-term Vision 2100 master plan, Military Circle was a preferable location for redevelopment because it is among the highest elevation properties available in Norfolk — a significant advantage with so much land threatened by storm-surge flooding and sea-level rise.

Although the city began informal talks with Williams and Venture Realty Group about their “Wellness Loop” proposal in 2022, no formal announcement or contract materialized, and in late 2023, the plans to build an arena-anchored development at Military Circle were dead.

Nonetheless, the city has demolished some of the property’s buildings, although clearing the rest of the mall is in limbo, Washington says, because a Ross Dress
for Less store remains on-site and has lease options that run through 2036. Demolition cannot proceed without their consent, but the city is in discussions with Ross, he says.

“There have been some conversations that we potentially look for a new home for Ross that’s kind of relatively close [to Military Circle],” Washington says. “They absolutely love it there.”

Also, the city launched a market analysis and feasibility study this year to examine the possibility of a mixed-use family sports complex at Military Circle, along with housing, retail and lodging space. Sentara Health’s insurance office is already in the former JCPenney space. 

Fort Monroe, the former military installation in Hampton, has seen a pause in redevelopment because of cost inflation, officials say. Photo by stock.adobe.com

On the move

Two other major downtown Norfolk projects are moving into design phases. The much-discussed renovation of Chrysler Hall has $1.5 million allocated for design costs during the next year, according to City Manager Pat Roberts, while the city’s capital improvements plan lists as high priorities a proposed $82 million allocation in 2027-28 for project construction.

Nearby, $4.5 million is earmarked each year in 2025 and 2026 to pay for the design of a “significant” renovation of Scope Arena. The capital budget allocates $54 million beginning in 2027 for renovations, labeling that project a “medium” priority.

Another major regional project facing marketplace uncertainty is the redevelopment of Fort Monroe 13 years after the Army closed the 565-acre property and turned it over to a state authority. A master plan completed in 2013 called for preserving the site’s history and envisioned a phased development with residential, retail, restaurants, a hotel and enhanced public spaces.

Smithfield-based Pack Brothers Hospitality had plans to invest $45 million to build a marina, renovate two historic buildings into conference space and a restaurant and hotel over the water, but those plans were shelved in January due to rising costs, the developers said.

“One of the biggest challenges for developers coming to Fort Monroe is there are a lot of historic preservation requirements that developers have to meet,” says John Hutcheson, the Fort Monroe Authority’s deputy executive director in charge of real estate. “Sometimes that increases cost, [and] sometimes it adds time to the permitting process. Specifically, to the Pack Brothers marina development, they got caught up in a combination of the cost inflation post-pandemic and the increase in interest rates for construction financing. Those two things combined to make the project not viable in the current market.”

Hutcheson says the project could become viable at some point and that the authority might make another request for proposals. For now, the authority is pursuing utility upgrades necessary because the Army’s old water and electrical systems do not fit with current utilities.

Those include two sites where Richmond’s Echelon Resources has options to transform historic buildings into apartments. Echelon has begun the design and permitting phases for two other sites that do not require utility upgrades and will house 75 to 80 apartments, says Hutcheson.

Developing the property is complicated, he notes. Its history goes back to Indigenous people, making it a part of American history, not just military history. The Old Point Comfort site also has historic significance as the place where enslaved Africans first landed in America in 1619. The authority planned to take bids in September to construct the African Landing Memorial plaza. 

“I think that will be the thing that carries Fort Monroe to achieve its rightful place among the most historic sites in our country,” Hutcheson says. “That’s what we’re all working for. That’s what all keeps us focused. It’s a big real estate project, but it’s equally as big a historic project.”  

Fort Monroe Authority exec director to retire

G. Glenn Oder is retiring as executive director of the Fort Monroe Authority in October, the authority announced Friday.

Oder has led the FMA for the past 12 years after leaving the General Assembly, where he served as a state delegate from 2002 to 2012, representing the 94th District in the House of Delegates.

“On behalf of the Youngkin administration, I express our sincere appreciation to former Del. Oder for his decades of exemplary public service, especially at historic Old Point Comfort, present-day Fort Monroe,” Caren Merrick, secretary of commerce and trade, said in a statement. “The administration is committed to supporting the FMA search process and continuing our support for the commonwealth’s responsibility at Fort Monroe.”

Oder oversaw Fort Monroe when the U.S. Army transitioned the former base to the state to be redeveloped. The FMA is responsible for the stewardship, preservation and development of the National Historic Landmark. Under his leadership, long-range projects got underway, including real estate investment, utility upgrades and the African Landing Memorial, which commemorates the first Africans in North America who were brought to Point Comfort in 1619 at Fort Monroe. Oder led the charge in recognizing Old Point Comfort’s historical significance and bring attention to it.

“The Fort Monroe Authority is grateful for the leadership of Glenn Oder for over 12 years. His dedication and vision have been instrumental in preserving the legacy of Fort Monroe for future generations,” FMA Chairman Jim Moran said in a statement.

Oder worked with four governors, three mayors and many National Park Service superintendents all while expanding Fort Monroe’s scope. The FMA now oversees and owns the historic Casemate Museum, a $9 million visitor and education center and has received national attention for being a “Site of Memory” on the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Slave Route Labor Project.

The Old Point Comfort Marina was going to be redeveloped by Smithfield-based hospitality management company Pack Brothers Hospitality to build a marina, renovate two existing historic buildings into conference space and a restaurant hotel over the water, but that has been put on hold indefinitely, as of January.

With Oder’s departure, the executive director role will be retitled to chief executive officer, effective July 1.

Developers put Fort Monroe marina redevelopment on indefinite hold

The redevelopment of Old Point Comfort Marina at Fort Monroe has been put on hold due to rising costs, with no timeline specified for when it could occur.

Instead of negotiating a long-term development agreement, the Fort Monroe Authority (FMA) and Smithfield-based hospitality management company Pack Brothers Hospitality (PBH) are now discussing a revised management agreement, the authority announced this week. PBH had been planning to invest $45 million to build a marina, renovate two existing historic buildings into conference space and a restaurant and hotel over the water, akin to its Smithfield Station development, in a development called 37 North at Fort Monroe.

The FMA’s long-term goal is to redevelop the marina, but rising construction costs and high-interest rates “have impacted the financial feasibility for PBH” to lead the renovation and reconstruction of the marina and portions of new construction for the restaurant, according to a news release. The marina can currently accommodate more than 300 boats that are up to 50 feet in length.

“The FMA does not have a timeline for the redevelopment of the marina,” FMA Executive Director Glenn Oder said in a statement to Virginia Business. “Our goal is to ensure the marina remains operational and the tenants as well as the public experience no change in the operating status of the marina.”

The original redevelopment plan was to start construction in fall 2024, with the marina and restaurant opening in fall 2025. The proposed hotel and conference center were planned to be completed 12 to 18 months later.

PBH is currently managing the marina under the terms of a revised letter agreement effective Dec. 29, 2023. The two parties have begun working on the terms of a longer-term marina management agreement that they aim to complete by Feb. 29, which would be “an annual arrangement that allows the management of the marina to continue while also still being nimble for future opportunities,” according to Oder.

“PBH looks forward to continuing its relationship with the Fort Monroe Authority and welcomes the opportunity to advance the initiatives of the FMA through this marina management agreement,” Randy Pack, PBH president and managing partner, said in a statement.

Leaseholders of the marina, including the Deadrise restaurant, are unaffected by the announcement, according to a news release.

The FMA oversees Fort Monroe, a national historic landmark in Hampton. The authority has more than $100 million in projected investment in the next two to five years, including public and private investment in preservation, renovation and utility projects.

Fort Monroe development moving forward

Apartments, a 250-person event center, a boutique hotel, a 500-seat restaurant, a marina and a firing range will soon dot the landscape at Fort Monroe with the help of historic tax credits, public funds and private investment.

Hanover County-based Echelon Resources Inc. was named master developer by the Fort Monroe Authority for four concurrent parcels. The first two are in the design stage and will be converted into 65,000 square feet of apartments, with flexibility for commercial use, according to owner Edwin Gaskin, who is hopeful construction will begin in 2023. Gaskin estimates the four parcels will eventually include 250 to 300 apartments.

Smithfield-based Pack Brothers Hospitality LLC is investing $45 million to build a marina, renovate two existing historic buildings into conference space and a restaurant and hotel over the water, akin to its Smithfield Station development. The new development will be called 37 North at Fort Monroe.

“With both of these developers, we wanted to focus on an understanding that the sites would be developed as part of Fort Monroe — and not become an island within an island — and both Echelon and Pack Brothers embrace that concept,” FMA Executive Director Glenn Oder explains, stressing the mixed-use focus of the 565 acres comprising Fort Monroe, a national historic landmark and former Army installation decommissioned in 2011.

The marina will accommodate 300 slips, spaces for super yachts, a pool and possibly a boardwalk connecting to the fort’s 7-mile trail along Fenwick Road. Pack Brothers Principal Randy Pack says construction could start in fall 2024. The marina and restaurant are anticipated to open in fall 2025. The hotel and conference center, in the third phase, would be completed 12 to 18 months later, Pack says.

The former post’s commissary, which has sat vacant for years, will be a new firing range and training facility for Hampton Police and Joint Base Langley-Eustis officers, made possible through a $7.6 million Department of Defense grant coupled with $3.7 million from the city of Hampton, says Bruce Sturk, the city’s director of federal facilities. Fort Monroe is owned by the state and the National Park Service and managed by the authority and NPS.

In September 2022, NPS issued a request for proposals for the nearly 24,000-square-foot former Paradise Ocean Club, which has been vacant after unsuccessful lease negotiations with the former tenants.  

Smithfield company announces $40M Fort Monroe redevelopment

Smithfield-based Pack Brothers Hospitality LLC on Wednesday announced plans for a conference center, hotel, 500-seat restaurant and an overhauled 300-slip marina on part of Fort Monroe in Hampton. The company plans to invest $40 million in the redevelopment project and has been granted a 40-year ground lease by the Fort Monroe Authority, the governor’s office said.

The lease of the land on the southwestern edge of the fort includes several requirements for Pack Brothers Hospitality, run by principals and brothers Randy and Brian Pack, including environmental protection provisions and historic preservation covenants that the company must meet before starting construction. The anticipated opening date is spring 2025, Pack Brothers said.

“Fort Monroe is among the most important historic sites in our country and commonwealth, and must be redeveloped in a way that reflects and preserves this significance,” Gov. Ralph Northam said in a statement. “Pack Brothers Hospitality shares our vision, and I am thrilled to see a Virginia company win this contract. Our administration remains committed to protecting this historical and natural area, expanding access to its recreational opportunities, and maintaining Fort Monroe as a place that is desirable to live, work, and visit now and for generations to come.”
According to the company, which owns and operates the Surry Seafood Co. in Surry and Smithfield Station, the project will be called 37 North at Fort Monroe and will repurpose buildings already on the national monument site. The 500-seat restaurant will incorporate the Old Torpedo Storehouse and the Old Cable Tank Building, as well as a 15,000-square-foot outdoor deck overlooking the harbor. The CAS Bindery will house a 250-person event facility and a new 90-room boutique hotel that will be an independent property, the Packs said in a news release.
Meanwhile, the Old Point Comfort Marina currently in operation will receive extensive renovations, including new floating docks, a 1,600-foot concrete “super dock” that will attenuate waves, and a new structure will house the yacht club, ships store and marina office.
“On behalf of our family, our employees, and the patrons who support our family businesses, Pack Brothers Hospitality is thrilled to accept this new challenge to repurpose and adaptively reuse the property at Old Point Comfort Marina,” Randy Pack said in a statement. “We recognize the value of this historic property, what it means to the community and believe our proposal will become an East Coast resort destination suitable for association with a national monument such as Fort Monroe.”
A rendering of the renovated marina planned at Fort Monroe. Image courtesy Pack Brothers Hospitality

Decommissioned in 2011 and proclaimed in part as a national monument, Fort Monroe is the largest fort by area ever built in the United States. Other than the portions preserved by the federal proclamation by President Barack Obama, Fort Monroe sought redevelopment plans for the land in 2018. It received 18 proposals, which were reviewed by the authority, the city of Hampton, the state’s Department of General Services and the National Park Service.

“This is an important chapter in Fort Monroe’s history, and we are excited to see Pack Brothers Hospitality bring it to life,” state Secretary of Commerce and Trade Brian Ball said in a statement. “The administration and FMA board has very high standards for this redevelopment project, and we believe Pack Brothers Hospitality will do an excellent job at developing the Marina District into an exciting destination.”