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Amazon.com fulfillment and delivery centers

Virginia Beach

As part of Amazon.com’s growing presence in Virginia, the tech giant is coming to the Virginia Beach area in the form of a 650,000-square-foot fulfillment center and a 219,000-square-foot delivery station. It is an endeavor with $350 million in investments and is expected to create more than 1,000 jobs. Construction remains on track, according to Amazon. The robotics fulfilment center, a five-floor facility with 55 loading docks, is expected to open in 2025. The delivery station, meanwhile, is scheduled to open near the end of 2024.


Photo courtesy Bon Secours

Bon Secours Harbour View Medical Center

Suffolk

After breaking ground in October 2022, construction on the Bon Secours Harbour View Medical Center — an expansion to the existing Harbour View campus in Suffolk — is still on track to be finished in March 2025, with plans to welcome the facility’s first patients in the second quarter of that year.

The $80 million, 98,000-square-foot hospital roughly doubles the size of the facilities on the Harbour View campus. It is a three-story building that will have 18 inpatient beds and four operating rooms, along with associated pre-operative and recovery spaces, and capacity to further expand vertically should need arise.

As of late June, installation of the hospital’s elevators and storefront and facility windows is complete, and the hanging of drywall and installation of sprinkler piping is in process.

 

 

 


Photo by Mark Rhodes

Atlantic Park

Virginia Beach

A $350 million joint project between music and fashion superstar Pharrell Williams and Venture Realty Group, Atlantic Park will span multiple acres and contain a surf lagoon and bungalows; a 3,500-person amphitheater; 300 apartments; more than 100,000 square feet of retail, restaurant and office space; two parking garages; and half a mile of upgraded public streets.

In late August, general contractor W.M. Jordan Co. laid the lowest depths of the Atlantic Park wave pool, which is expected to be open in May 2025. A wave machine is expected to be installed in October. Also, the $54.8 million amphitheater known as “The Dome” is set to be complete for a May 2025 opening.

 

 

 

 


Photo by Mark Rhodes

Fusion @ NEON Apartments

Norfolk

Norfolk real estate developer Marathon Development Group is building a 239-unit, $50 million apartment complex on West Olney Road, part of Norfolk’s Neon District. The apartment complex will contain studio, one-, two- and three-bedroom units ranging in size from 498 to 1,733 square feet. Construction was not yet complete in July, but the project’s developers expected to have initial residents arrive in August, and the leasing office had started accepting applications and offering hard hat tours.

 

 

 

 

 


Photo courtesy Virginia Department of Transportation

Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel

Hampton and Norfolk

The commonwealth’s largest transportation project to date — valued at $3.9 billion — is approximately halfway done with construction. The project entails construction, expansion and renovation along the 10-mile stretch of Interstate 64 from Hampton to Norfolk. Half of Hampton’s Mallory Street Overpass has been demolished and replaced with a new bridge of a greater span length. Traffic was set to be shifted there in late summer so work can begin to replace the other half of the bridge. 

Construction on the North Trestle — an eight-lane bridge between Hampton and the HRBT North Island — is also half done. The new four-lane eastbound North Trestle was opened for public use in May and is currently serving two lanes of traffic. North Island was expanded by 15 acres. Both the second halves of the new Mallory Street Overpass and the North Trestle are expected to be complete in 2026, in the fall and summer, respectively.

The South Trestle — an eight-lane bridge between HRBT South Island and Norfolk’s Willoughby Spit — is more than 70% complete. VDOT expects to make traffic shifts onto the structure starting in 2025. Road widening and rehabilitation of the Willoughby Bay Bridge, along with construction for Norfolk roadway spanning from Willoughby Spit to Patrol Road, is also in progress.

Mary, the project’s tunnel boring machine, has finished mining from South to North Island, meaning the first of the project’s two new two-lane bored tunnels is complete. So far, Mary has excavated 7,941 feet and installed 1,191 concrete rings. It will take approximately five months to rotate and reassemble Mary for her second tunnel boring back to South Island. The trip is expected to start late September and finish in summer 2025.

Finally, the expanded bridge-tunnel is expected to be open to traffic in February 2027, with final projects like landscaping expected to be finished in August 2027.


Rendering courtesy Seafood Industrial Park

Seafood Industrial Park

Newport News

The northern portion of the city’s longstanding seafood harbor is set to undergo a harbor dredging, dock replacements, and a seafood market installation. All of the projects are expected to commence construction between January and July 2025.

Demolition of existing 130-feet-long wooden docks and dredging will take place first, followed by the construction of new piers with concrete decking and pilings and safety features. The replacement docks are expected to expand capacity to 10 to 12 boats and have a recreational dock for transient boats visiting the upcoming market.

Designs for the dredging cost $123,000 and are now complete, with dredging work estimated to cost $1.75 million. Designs for the dock improvements cost $239,000 and wrapped up in July. Construction for the dock improvements — estimated to cost $5 million — are expected to begin this coming winter. The planned seafood market will be located near the piers and is expected to span roughly 7,800 square feet. The market’s design cost $802,000, and construction is estimated to cost approximately $9 million.

Letter from the Publisher

In the wake of the tragic collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge, the Port of Virginia stepped up to offer its support and immediately began taking on any cargo needing to be redirected our way.

Apparently caused by a power outage aboard the container ship that collided with the Key Bridge, the accident shut down the Port of Baltimore entirely for more than a week. As of early April, Baltimore was opening temporary shipping lanes for smaller barges and tugboats, but it may take until at least late May before shipping there is restored to its usual levels and Baltimore can handle larger container ships again. In the meantime, it has added stress on the East Coast supply chain.

The accident highlights the critical importance of port access to our economy, but it’s also a testament to Virginia’s ongoing efforts in making the Hampton Roads maritime ports wider, deeper and safer that the Port of Virginia is able to absorb the extra container capacity without strain.

That capability is the result of significant investments. Wider and deeper channels come at a cost; it is the oceangoing equivalent of taking a well-worn path and converting it to a superhighway.

In March, the port finished widening Thimble Shoal Channel West, providing the berth needed for the biggest container ships to move two ways simultaneously. Meanwhile, a dredging project scheduled for completion in 2025 will give the Port of Virginia the East Coast’s deepest and widest harbor, allowing the largest modern container ships to make Virginia a fully loaded first port of call. And what’s more, the Virginia Department of Transportation is working to finish its $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Expansion project by early 2027, alleviating regional traffic congestion and continuing to ensure that container ships calling on the port are free of overhead draft restrictions.

All of this results in a huge competitive advantage for the commonwealth’s ports system, which ranks among the top ports of entry and egress for East Coast imports and exports.

Virginia’s maritime industry is vibrant and innovative. Offshore wind turbines and the accompanying supply chain necessary to construct and supply them are also developing opportunities. That’s not to say that all these prospects don’t come with obstacles such as global supply chain disruptions, sea-level rise, and labor shortages. These factors all present challenges that Virginia’s maritime, logistics, economic development and educational institutions are working collectively to address.

Our hope is that the 2024 Virginia Maritime Guide will provide you with a wealth of information on each of these investments, opportunities, challenges and more. To compile this guide, we worked closely with the Virginia Maritime Association and the Port of Virginia. We thank them for their assistance and look forward to the maritime industry’s ongoing success in the commonwealth.

Bernie Niemeier

President & Publisher

Virginia Business

HRBT expansion’s first tunnel boring is complete

Mary, the tunnel boring machine that has been paving the way for the expanded Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel, hit a milestone Wednesday when she finished the first of twin tunnels that are part of the bridge-tunnel’s expansion.

Launched from the HRBT’s South Island a year ago, the $70 million custom-built tunnel boring machine has been busy — it excavated 7,900 feet, or 750,000 cubic yards of soil, while installing 1,191 concrete rings behind her, according to the Virginia Department of Transportation.

Now, it’s ready to turn around and do it all over again on the return trip to carve out the expansion’s second tunnel. But that turnaround is no easy process. It’s expected to take about six months to turn the tunnel boring machine around and position it for relaunch, when it will begin constructing a parallel tunnel back to the South Island.

About 46 feet in diameter and 430 feet in length, Mary on her busiest day excavated 113 feet of soil and installed 17 rings.

Mary’s work may be in a tunnel, but it’s not in a vacuum.

The $3.9 billion HRBT expansion is the largest highway construction project in Virginia’s history. It’s now expected to be completed by August 2027, about 18 months later than the originally scheduled completion, according to a VDOT news release in late March.

The project consists of widening Interstate 64 between Norfolk and Hampton, including twin two-lane bored tunnels, five new bridges and 20 widened bridges, according to VDOT.

“The Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel made history in 1957 as the world’s first tunnel constructed between two man-made islands,” VDOT Commissioner Stephen Brich said in a statement. “Today, the HRBT makes history again as Virginia’s first bored tunnel. With the breakout of the TBM, we are one step closer to the completion of this transformative project that will increase capacity at one of the region’s most congested corridors.”

The tunnel Mary just completed is about 50 feet deeper than the HRBT’s existing tunnels, with the new tunnel’s deepest point plunging 173 feet below the water’s surface. It’s the first tunnel bored in Virginia — the existing ones were constructed using an immersed tube approach, according to VDOT.

“This historic milestone is the culmination of years of transformational transportation congestion relief planning and hard work. Today’s first tunnel breakout is a testament to [the Hampton Roads Transportation Accountability Commission] and VDOT working together to realize a greater vision for Hampton Roads. Once completed, the HRBT and I-64 congestion relief projects financed and delivered through the HRTAC, VDOT, and FHWA [Federal Highway Administration] partnership will enhance the economic vitality and quality of life for the region’s 1.7 million people for generations,” HRTAC Executive Director Kevin Page said in a statement.

A sampling of Virginia’s major road projects

HAMPTON ROADS

Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Expansion Project

Work continues on Virginia’s largest high- way construction project, the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT) expansion. The project will widen the four-lane segments of the 9.9-mile Interstate 64 corridor between Norfolk and Hampton to six lanes on land and eight over the water with twin two-lane tunnels. In April 2023, a custom tunnel boring machine (TBM) launched from South Island to construct the first of two new tunnels. Then, in the fall, crews connected the new south trestle bridge to Willoughby Spit in Norfolk, allowing it to be accessed by land, so concrete deliveries could be made 24 hours a day for the new bridge deck without impacting traffic. In November, crews completed the largest continuous concrete pour in the Virginia Department of Transportation’s history when they paved 5,480 cubic yards of concrete over 31 hours for the base slab of the North Island receiving pit. Finally, in December 2023, the tunnel boring machine reached the halfway point between South Island and North Island, completing 596 rings after excavating about 4,000 feet of the new tunnel. This spring, I-64 eastbound traffic will be shifted onto the new north trestle bridge at the Hampton shoreline, connecting to the existing eastbound tunnel.

NORTHERN VIRGINIA

Improve 95

As part of the plan to address gridlock on Interstate 95 near Fredericksburg, VDOT has several projects underway between Exit 148 and Exit 130 at a cost of more than $1 billion. Improve I-95 consists of four construction projects that will be in various phases through 2025.

Long Bridge expansion

The most significant rail choke point on the East Coast will be fixed as part of a $729 million federal funding package for transportation projects in Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C., U.S. Sens. Mark Warner and Tim Kaine and Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced in December 2023. The package includes funding to finalize the long-planned $1.9 billion expansion and upgrade of the Long Bridge, a nearly 120-year-old, two-track railroad bridge that connects Virginia and D.C. and serves as the main passenger and freight rail connection between the Southeast and Northeast.

SHENANDOAH VALLEY/ SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA

Interstate 81 improvements

Resulting from a 2018 study, the $3.1 billion Interstate 81 Corridor Improvement Program lists 64 planned upgrades targeting safety and reliability along the 325-mile corridor from Winchester to Bristol. It’s scheduled for completion in 2033. In October 2023, the Commonwealth Transportation Board awarded a $7.7 million contract to Fairfield-Echols for construction of an I-81 southbound auxiliary lane that will connect exits 220 and 221 in the Staunton area, creating an additional lane between the two interchanges and more space for merging traffic from I-64 to I-81. Next to that, a four-mile stretch of I-81 will be widened, adding a third lane in each direction this spring. The $101 million project is between exits 221 and 225 and includes the widening of five bridges. The widening of I-81 in the Bristol area was expected to begin construction early this year. 

Light at the end of the tunnel

Off and on since the 1980s, John Rivera has commuted from his home in Hampton to Naval Station Norfolk.

He’s seen Interstate 64 grow from two to four lanes in the region, but these days, Rivera, a ship maintenance manager for the U.S. Navy, mainly sees lots of traffic jams caused by the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT) expansion project, for which construction began in November 2020.

To avoid the worst of the congestion, Rivera hustles to reach the HRBT before 6 a.m., and he negotiated a hybrid work plan with his manager so that he can leave each day in time to get back to the tunnel before 2 p.m.

While expansion construction has made his commute trickier, Rivera allows that his day-to-day existence will be improved if the expansion decreases congestion on the HRBT. “Traffic affects our work-life balance,” he says.

The hope is that the expansion will improve quality of life for millions of people living in and traveling through the Hampton Roads region. During the summer tourism season, as many as 100,000 vehicles per day traverse the HRBT, according to the Virginia Department of Transportation.

In addition to reducing traffic congestion, the expansion will create more lanes for hurricane evacuation and is expected to improve access to the Port of Virginia’s marine terminals and Naval Station Norfolk, the world’s largest naval station.

Getting it done, however, is a massive endeavor.

It includes the construction of twin, two-lane tunnels, expanding the HRBT to eight lanes underwater. The project also includes widening about a 10-mile stretch of Interstate 64.

Often, the biggest construction projects in the United States are broken into multiple smaller projects, points out Ryan Banas, project director for the expansion.

“One of the things that makes us truly unique is that we are a single $3.9 billion construction project,” says Banas. “So, looking at it from that perspective, we are one of the largest [construction projects] in the country. We are the largest project that VDOT has ever performed and the largest transportation project that the commonwealth has ever had.”

Banas is an associate vice president for HNTB, which is providing engineering services and project management for the expansion. The construction contractor for the project is Hampton Roads Connector Partners, a joint venture led by Dragados USA that includes Vinci Construction, Flatiron Construction and Dodin Campenon Bernard.

VDOT still lists November 2025 as the contracted completion date for the expansion, but Banas allows that work has taken longer than planned. “We’re running a little bit more than a year behind schedule,” he says, chalking the delay up to “the complexity of a project of this magnitude.”

HRBT project workers excavated a 65-foot-deep receiving pit on North Island where tunnel boring machine Mary will make a 180-degree U-turn after completing the first tunnel. Photo courtesy Virginia Department of Transportation

In September, VDOT staff asked the Commonwealth Transportation Board for a 600-day extension on the project, and the board voted in favor of allowing the state highway commissioner to change the project agreement.

Progress on the HRBT expansion is an ever-popular topic for Hampton Roads residents and leaders, says Bryan Stephens, president and CEO of the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce.

“There’s a great deal of interest in the project and its timeline and its completion because I think they understand the importance of it to our economy here,” Stephens says.

Reducing congestion on the HRBT is key to the region’s economic health, says Doug Smith, president and CEO of the Hampton Roads Alliance, a regional economic development organization. “That connection between the south side of the peninsula is critically important for cargo, is critically important for tourism, [and] it is critically important for commuters,” he says. “And so, to be able to solve that congestion … for the coming decades is a really important project for the growth of the region.”

Hampton Roads’ economy, Stephens points out, is supported by three pillars: the Department of Defense, the Port of Virginia and tourism. The HRBT expansion, he says, is badly needed for all three pillars to remain healthy.

“All three of those rely on an effective and efficient multimodal transportation system,” Stephens says.

Mary’s big dig

The HRBT expansion work that’s most noticeable to drivers revolves around the widening of I-64.

“On the Mallory Street Bridge, crews finished girder erection and will soon begin constructing the deck spans on the southern half of this new bridge,” says Brooke Grow, VDOT communications manager for the HRBT expansion project. “Motorists may have also noticed many drainage improvements and widening activities occurring in the median of I-64 East/West that will begin to accommodate two additional travel lanes in each direction over the coming months.”

Workers also continue to check off project milestones.

As early as winter 2024, VDOT anticipates traffic on I-64 east from Hampton may switch from a temporary marine bridge constructed for the expansion to the new permanent marine bridge, according to Grow.

The biggest bit of progress on the expansion in recent months came in late April when a $70 million, custom-built tunnel boring machine (TBM) launched from South Island, one of two artificial islands created for the HRBT prior to its 1957 opening.

The TBM will dig an 8,000-foot-long tunnel to North Island, the other man-made island that’s located closer to Hampton, before turning around and digging another tunnel back to South Island.

“I will tell you, the day Mary breaks through, that’ll be a huge celebration for the project team,” Banas says.

In 2021, VDOT announced students from St. Gregory the Great Catholic School in Virginia Beach had suggested the winning entry in a contest to name the TBM. The students picked the name Mary after Mary Winston Jackson, the late Hampton-born, Black mathematician and aerospace engineer at NASA, who was a subject of the Academy Award-nominated 2016 film “Hidden Figures.”

German TBM manufacturer Herrenknecht AG built Mary over 14 months. At 46 feet in diameter and 430 feet long, it’s the second largest TBM ever used in North America and the largest TBM of its type, according to Banas. “It’s very easy to get awestruck looking at it,” he says.

It took four months and three vessels to transport Mary to Virginia, according to VDOT. Once here, workers reassembled the TBM in a specially designed pit on South Island, an endeavor that took another six months.

On April 24, Mary went to work. Its 46-foot cutterhead relies on 198 scrapers and 26 disc cutters to scoop soil, according to VDOT.

When finished, the HRBT project will create eight lanes of traffic spanning across and under the harbor from Norfolk to Hampton. Photo courtesy Virginia Department of Transportation

Mary also has another job: installing the tunnel’s lining.

Workers for Alexandria-based Technopref Industries build 15-foot-wide segments out of precast concrete at a facility in Cape Charles. It takes nine segments to connect into one ring, which make up the tunnel’s lining, according to VDOT. More than 21,000 segments will be needed to complete the two tunnels.

From Cape Charles, the segments are transported via barge down the Chesapeake Bay to South Island. A crane transports the segments to the TBM, which has a vacuum erector capable of precisely fitting the segmented rings into place.

As of late September, Mary had installed 244 rings and had mined nearly 1,700 feet beneath Hampton Roads harbor, according to Grow. “The entire machine is underground,” Banas says. “You can see the tunnel liner taking shape behind it.”

Mary couldn’t do its work without Katherine, the slurry treatment plant, which is named for the late Katherine Johnson, another mathematician at NASA who was played by Taraji P. Henson in “Hidden Figures.”

Slurry, a mixture of bentonite clay and water, provides a counterpressure that allows Mary to dig, according to VDOT. Slurry and debris produced by Mary’s tunnel digs are transported through 22-inch pipes to Katherine. Once the excavated material reaches Katherine, technicians monitor the process to check for anomalies.

In early September, three TBM operators were running Mary five days a week, 24 hours a day, according to Banas. Each TBM operator hails from outside North America — “just because that experience doesn’t reside here in the U.S. yet,” he says.

During their shifts, Banas explains, the operators sit in a 6-by-12-foot room with “an array of monitors and sensors in front of them that allow them to control the machine directly from their station.”

They also have plenty of folks looking over their shoulders.

“We have 100% ability to remotely monitor anything that’s going on in the machine,” Banas says. “Our contractor can … have other experts look at the data in real time and also have recordings to go back and understand how the machine is behaving.”

VDOT can do the same thing.

“We have experts that VDOT has brought in that … ensure that these machines are operating in a manner that ensures their longevity throughout their journey,” Banas explains.

Turnaround time

Workers have completed excavating a 65-foot-deep receiving pit on the North Island, according to Grow. This will be Mary’s resting spot after the TBM completes the first tunnel.

As of late September, workers were hand-tying steel rebar that will later support a 5,400-cubic-yard concrete base slab for Mary. Pouring the concrete for the slab, which was scheduled to take place in mid-October, was estimated to take about 36 continuous hours, requiring 600 concrete trucks.

“As far as we’ve been able to determine, it is the largest concrete pour in VDOT’s history and we well believe it may be one of the largest pours in the commonwealth’s history,” Banas says.

If work continues to progress at the current pace, Banas expects that they’ll begin the process of turning Mary around to dig the second tunnel by fall 2024.

“It’s going to take us between about four and five months to do that full rotation,” he says. “Because during that time … Mary will be completely out of the ground. It gives us a great opportunity to go in and inspect all of her surfaces, cutter tools, all the equipment associated with her that we can’t see when she’s actively mining.”

Banas estimates Mary will return to South Island by summer 2025. At that point, he says, Mary will be put out to pasture. The TBM was designed, Banas adds, for the conditions at the HRBT. “We have very unique geology here,” he says.

Some parts of Mary may be sold back to Herrenknecht, but mostly, the TBM will be scrapped. “We are Mary’s one and only engagement,” Banas says.

Like its namesake, Banas says, Mary can take pride in the important role it played in Virginia’s history.

In 100 years, he says, the tunnels Mary is currently digging will likely still be serving their intended purpose. “It’s pretty special,” says Banas. 

Under construction

Atlantic Park

Virginia Beach

Proposed in 2017 by music icon Pharrell Williams and Venture Realty Group, Atlantic Park finally got underway in March with a groundbreaking on the first phase of the $350 million surf park project. Phase one will involve 10.95 acres, including 309 multifamily units, 10,000 square feet of office space, a 70,000-square-foot indoor/outdoor entertainment venue and a 2.67-acre indoor lagoon — the first Wavegarden Cove facility in the nation — and two public parking decks. Various components of the project are estimated to open between December 2024 and March 2025, developers expect. The second phase will consist of additional attractions, retail, public parking and residential space. A conceptual plan has been in place for Phase Two for quite some time, and the development firm is in the process of finalizing the plan.


Photo courtesy Virginia Department of Transportation

Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel

Hampton and Norfolk

Work continues on the $3.9 billion transportation project — Virginia’s largest ever — in all areas along the nearly 10-mile corridor of Interstate 64. As of July, the project was more than 50% complete. In early March, construction crews completed the first traffic shift onto the temporary I-64 East south trestle, and contracting group Hampton Roads Connector Partners continues to work on the three other marine trestles that connect both Norfolk and Hampton to the islands. Mary, the project’s tunnel boring machine, has been digging two new tunnels between Norfolk and Hampton at a rate of 50 feet a day since April. The twin tunnels will take more than two years to complete, and the machine must be reconstructed when it reaches the North Island, before it can turn around and dig the second tunnel back to the South Island.

Crews have finished construction of the Slurry Treatment Plant, dubbed Katherine for late NASA Langley Research Center mathematician Katherine Johnson. The four-story treatment plant, which processes and removes dirt and other tunneling byproducts, is the largest of its kind in North America. Mining operations began in late April and, to date, have mined more than 500 feet and installed 91 rings for the tunnel construction. The contract completion date for the HRBT project is November 2025 — although work is behind schedule by more than a year. Nonetheless, the Virginia Department of Transportation continues to work closely with HRCP to mitigate delays and reach project milestones.


 

Photo courtesy Dominion Energy

Fairwinds Landing

Norfolk

On June 29, developers held a groundbreaking event for Dominion Energy’s two-building Monitoring and Coordination Center (MCC). It joins Newport News Shipbuilding as the two largest tenants to date in Fairwinds Landing, a maritime operations and logistics center supporting Hampton Roads’ offshore wind, defense and transportation industries. Set to occupy the 122-acre Lambert’s Point Docks, the $100 million project is expected to be home for other major tenants, officials say. Fairwinds Landing is beginning to see an increase in vessels berthing at its facility that are supporting Dominion’s
$9.8 billion Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind farm, under development 27 miles off the Virginia Beach coast. A limited liability corporation, Fairwinds Landing is a partnership between The Miller Group, Balicore Construction and Fairlead Integrated. Developers continue to predict the project will be largely completed in three to five years, with the MCC ready by 2025 and accommodating 200 construction and engineering jobs.


 

Photo courtesy Stihl Inc.Photo courtesy Stihl Inc.

Stihl Inc. headquarters

Virginia Beach

Last year, Stihl Inc., the U.S. subsidiary of the German chainsaw and outdoor power equipment manufacturer, announced a $49 million expansion, adding 26,000 square feet to its 60,000-square-foot headquarters and manufacturing facility in Virginia Beach. The company plans to increase its capacity to manufacture chainsaw guide bars by a third, creating 15 jobs.
The site for the guide-bar facility expansion was cleared in October 2022, and the building structure was completed in February. The construction is currently in the commissioning phase, with all machines expected to be installed by the end of this year. Production is estimated to begin in early 2024, the company said in June. Stihl is also expanding its battery manufacturing operations, with plans set to be announced later this year.


 

Photo courtesy Fairbanks Morse Defense

Fairbanks Morse Defense

Chesapeake

Fairbanks Morse Defense, which builds, maintains and services naval power and propulsion systems, opened its newest training and service center campus in Chesapeake on May 17. FMD moved 40 jobs from its former service center in Norfolk to Chesapeake and also added
10 jobs. The $13 million, 45,000-square-foot facility offers fully integrated service and technology solutions to the Navy, Military Sealift Command and Coast Guard fleets. The move to Chesapeake came after the Navy informed FMD it was interested in increasing the number of field service technicians and having the training facility close by. All equipment can now be serviced in the 25,000-square-foot service area in Chesapeake, and training across all products sold by FMD can be completed at the new facility’s 20,000-square-foot training space, instead of in Wisconsin, where it was previously conducted.


 

 

Transportation 2023: RYAN BANAS

Banas oversees the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel expansion, the largest transportation infrastructure project in state history. Aimed at increasing capacity and easing congestion, the project will widen existing four-lane segments along
10 miles of the Interstate 64 corridor in Norfolk and Hampton, and also will add twin underwater tunnels crossing the harbor. Running about a year behind schedule, the project is expected to be completed in 2026.

Overseeing daily administration of the HRBT project, Banas directly manages a team of 110 employees, including Virginia Department of Transportation staff. He’s also overseeing Hampton Roads Connector Partners, the joint venture designing and building the project, which has about 1,000 workers.

A project manager with HNTB for the past 10 years, Banas also has worked on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel expansion, the Arlington National Cemetery Southern Expansion and the Elizabeth River Tunnels project. Prior to HNTB, he spent five years as assistant construction manager with Parsons Brinckerhoff (now WSP USA), working on projects including the Gilmerton Bridge replacement in Chesapeake and the Woodrow Wilson Bridge in Alexandria.

Banas has a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

Miles to go

Virginia’s largest-ever highway construction project, the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT) expansion, continues to dominate the state’s ongoing roadwork projects.

Construction began in October 2020. The contractor — Hampton Roads Connector Partners, a joint venture led by Dragados USA Inc. that includes Vinci Construction, Flatiron Construction and Dodin Campenon Bernard — was running 11 months behind schedule as of January 2023. However, the Virginia Department of Transportation has not changed the contract completion date of November 2025. The department “continues to work with the contractor to mitigate any production delays and will continue to support HRCP as needed to ensure they achieve project milestones,” VDOT said in a statement.

The expansion is meant to reduce congestion, add emergency evacuation routes and increase access to the Port of Virginia. It will widen 9.9 miles of Interstate 64 between Norfolk and Hampton, from four lanes to six on land and eight over the water, with twin two-lane tunnels. VDOT anticipates major traffic shifts will begin this spring.

Work on laying bases for bridge trestles continues. Early this year, construction crews finished preparations to allow a new temporary eastbound marine trestle on South Island to open. The trestle will temporarily support traffic emerging from the eastbound tunnel, allowing demolition of the existing bridge to begin.

A $70 million custom-built tunnel boring machine (TBM) will carve underwater paths. Crews continue to assemble the TBM, and on Jan. 13, two cranes lowered the 46-foot-diameter cutterhead into the South Island launch pit and attached it to the TBM. This first necessitated contractors to excavate 118,000 cubic yards of soil — enough to cover 55 football fields with one foot of soil. Work continues on the North Island receiving pit. In March, crews were working on final preparations to the launch shaft and the TBM, including welding components together. VDOT expected system testing activities to begin in March, with tunnel boring expected to begin as early as April if testing results were good.

The commonwealth’s other major ongoing highway projects are:

Northern Virginia

Improve 95

The state government entered a $1 billion public-private partnership with Transurban, an Australian toll-road operations company that has its U.S. headquarters in Alexandria, as part of its Improve 95 plan to address congestion. Developers estimate the project will increase Interstate 95’s capacity by 66% during rush hour traffic. The $565 million
Fredericksburg Extension (Fred Ex) project will extend I-95 express lanes south to Exit 133 in Stafford County, a roughly 10-mile stretch. Transurban will operate and maintain the express lanes, charging variable tolls in a contract that ends in 2087. Construction work began in spring 2019 and was originally expected to end in late 2022, but construction delays have pushed the expected completion date to late 2023.

Shenandoah/Southwest Virginia

Interstate 81 improvements, Coalfields Expressway

The $2.7 billion Interstate 81 Corridor Improvement Program encompasses 64 improvements, including interchange ramp upgrades, highway widening and lane additions — all designed to improve road safety and reliability for the 325-mile corridor from Bristol to Winchester. Stemming from a 2018 study, the project is scheduled for a 2033 completion. Improvement schedules vary. One recently completed improvement is the extension of the northbound and southbound acceleration lanes at Exit 205 in Rockbridge County by roughly 0.4 miles and 0.3 miles, respectively. Construction started in April 2021 and ended in October 2022.

The proposed $4 billion Coalfields Expressway (CFX), designated as U.S. Route 460/121, is set to run through Southwest Virginia and southern West Virginia. Construction on a $207 million 2-mile stretch of U.S. Route 460 that will extend from near state Route 604 to the existing Route 460 in Grundy is expected to be finished this December, at which point Virginia would have opened 8 miles of the CFX. VDOT plans to widen the same 2-mile portion to four lanes using $7 million that the U.S. government allocated in its fiscal 2023 spending bill. In February, the department was working with the contractor, Bizzack Construction LLC, to add the additional lane for the 2-mile widening to the contract. VDOT anticipates work starting in the spring or summer, with an expected completion in late 2023.  

A sampling of Virginia’s major road projects

HAMPTON ROADS

Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel Expansion Project

Work continues on Virginia’s largest highway construction project, the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel (HRBT) expansion. The contract ends in November 2025, but the contractor — Hampton Roads Connector Partners, a joint venture led by Dragados USA Inc. — was about 11 months behind in January, according to the Virginia Department of Transportation. VDOT hasn’t changed the contract completion date and says the department “will continue to work with the contractor to mitigate any production delays.”

The project will widen the four-lane segments of the 9.9-mile Interstate 64 corridor between Norfolk and Hampton to six lanes on land and eight over the water with twin two-lane tunnels. Marine work laying bases for bridge trestles is ongoing.

Crews will use a $70 million custom-built tunnel boring machine (TBM) to carve out underwater paths. In June 2022, contractors finished excavating 118,000 cubic yards of soil for the TBM launch pit. In fall 2022, workers reassembled 170 pieces of the TBM on the South Island in the pit. Work on the receiving pit on the North Island is ongoing, and VDOT anticipates boring will begin in spring.

NORTHERN VIRGINIA

Improve 95

As part of the Improve 95 plan to address congestion, the state government entered into a $1 billion public-private partnership with Transurban, an Australian toll-road operations company with its U.S. headquarters in Alexandria. The $565 million Fredericksburg Extension (Fred Ex) project will extend Interstate 95 express lanes about 10 miles south to Exit 133 in Stafford County. Transurban will operate and maintain the lanes, charging variable usage tolls in a contract that continues until 2087. Construction on the project started in spring 2019. The project’s expected completion was initially late 2022 but became late 2023 due to construction delays.

SHENANDOAH/SOUTHWEST VIRGINIA

Interstate 81 improvements, Coalfields Expressway

Resulting from a 2018 study, the $2.7 billion Interstate 81 Corridor Improvement Program lists 64 planned upgrades targeting safety and reliability along the 325-mile corridor from Bristol to Winchester. It’s scheduled for completion in 2033. Improvements include interchange ramp upgrades, highway widening and auxiliary lanes. Projects are in varying stages. A recently completed project is the 0.8-mile ramp extension from Route 11 onto northbound I-81 at exit 47 in Marion that opened to traffic in July 2022. VDOT traffic engineers estimated that the extension could reduce crashes by up to 77%.

The 115-mile, $4 billion Coalfields Expressway — U.S. Route 460/121 — is slated to run through Southwest Virginia and southern West Virginia, boosting commerce and tourism. About 50 miles of the proposed expressway would run through Virginia. Construction is underway on a $207 million 2-mile section of U.S. Route 460 that will extend from near Route 604 to the existing Route 460 in Grundy, with an expected completion date in December. The federal government’s fiscal 2023 spending bill allocated $7 million to VDOT for CFX design and construction, which the state plans to use to widen the 2-mile section to four lanes. Construction is set to start in March and end in December 2023.   

Full speed ahead

No other region of Virginia moves the entire commonwealth forward like Hampton Roads. Sure, Dee Cee is about technology, government contracting and national politics. And Richmond is about politics that are generally more local.

Hampton Roads, on the other hand, is about the military and commerce. The ports, the railways, interstates, tunnels, trucks and air cargo move millions of shipping containers from across the globe to distribution centers all across Virginia and ultimately to many destinations across the nation.

The past year has been another period of growth for the region. Container volumes are up. Port profitability is up. Projects to widen and deepen shipping channels are nearing completion. Wind power is ramping up, and the $3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge-Tunnel expansion is striving to open in November 2025 as expected. These are all major projects and important investments in the economy of the commonwealth.

Meanwhile, tourism in Virginia Beach is on the upswing. Hotel projects that were launched pre-pandemic have been completed. Occupancy rates for leisure travel were strong this summer, and state and regional hospitality experts have high hopes for business travel rebounding this fall after difficulties during the pandemic’s height. New investments are being made in cultural venues to sustain a thriving arts and music scene across the entire region.

If you aren’t already doing business in Hampton Roads, maybe you should be. The talent pool being produced by local colleges and universities is outstanding. Virginia’s largest manufacturer, Newport News-based Huntington Ingalls Industries, offers extensive training to support a variety of highly skilled positions at its Newport News Shipbuilding subsidiary, the state’s largest industrial employer. There is an ongoing supply of well-trained individuals who are completing military service and looking forward to entering the civilian workforce. In these pages, the new commander of Navy Region Mid-Atlantic, Virginia Beach native Rear Adm. Christopher “Scotty” Gray, discusses how he plans to continue the Navy’s partnership with local developers.

We hope that you will enjoy reading the 2022 issue of Hampton Roads Business as much as we’ve enjoyed reporting on the stories in these pages. Our goal is to help everyone better understand the area’s economy and connect with the businesses that drive its success. Hampton Roads is a team player not only for all of Virginia, but also for points across the nation and the globe.

Full speed ahead!

Bernie Niemeier,

President & Publisher