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International trade supports 1 million Virginia jobs

A Business Roundtable study found that international trade supports 1.054 million jobs in Virginia, or one out of five positions.

Business Roundtable is made up of U.S. CEOs of major corporations. The organization supports congressional passage of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), a free trade agreement to replace NAFTA.


Trade with Canada and Mexico alone supports 329,100 jobs in Virginia, according to the report. Exports from Virginia to Canada and Mexico have increased by 227 percent since the implementation of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the study said.

The study – prepared by Trade Partnership Worldwide with the latest-available employment data from 2017 – examines the net impacts of both exports and imports of goods and services on U.S. jobs in all 50 states.
It also compared 2017 data to pre-NAFTA data from 1992. The study found that trade-supported jobs in Virginia increased by 94 percent from 1992 (when NAFTA was implemented) to 2017 – four times faster than total employment.


The study also revealed that Virginia exported $6.1 billion in goods and services to Canada and Mexico in 2017 and that goods and services exports account for 6.5 percent of Virginia’s total GDP.

BridgeStreet names new CEO

Kamal Advani has been named CEO of BridgeStreet, a Reston-based hospitality platform.

He succeeds Sean Worker, who’s leaving to pursue other interests.

Advani is a BridgeStreet board member and managing director of Versa Capital Management LLC, BridgeStreet’s controlling shareholder.

BridgeStreet’s online booking platform allows travelers book extended stay hotels, serviced apartments, homes, hostels and vacation rentals.

The company offers bookings in more than 130 countries.

Short-term lease signed in Danville

                Sam M. Walton Development Complex has signed a short-term lease for a Danville warehouse, which will be used as storage space for Walmart stores.
                Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer’s Norman Moon says Walmart will use 56,211 square feet of space at the warehouse located at 2117 Halifax Road. The retailer will store goods in the warehouse as it remodels stores in Danville and the surrounding area.
                Moon and George Lupton – both with Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer – handled the lease negotiations on behalf of the landlord. According to the Danville Assessor Website, the building is owned by Limborgh II LLC.

Marshalls leases space at Williamsburg Shopping Center

Marshalls has leased 21,858 square feet in the Williamsburg Shopping Center, according to Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer.

The retailer will be located at 1256 Richmond Rd. in Williamsburg. Chris Rouzie handled the lease negotiations on behalf of the tenant.

Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer also announced that East Coast Appliance renewed its lease of 15,882 square feet in Norfolk. Geoff Poston handled the lease negotiations on behalf of the tenant and landlord for the property located at 3750 Progress Rd.

Additionally, Goodwill renewed its lease of 13,000 square feet in Virginia Beach. The store is located at Lynnhaven North Shopping Center. Chris Rouzie handled the lease negotiations on behalf of the tenant.

Fame Central renewed its lease of 11,080 square feet in Yorktown. Andy Dallas handled the lease negotiations for the site at 120 Newsome Drive.

Apple Hospitality sells nine hotels for $95 million

Richmond-based Apple Hospitality REIT Inc. said Monday it has sold nine hotels for $95 million. The buyer was not disclosed.

The transaction was completed on March 28. The company says it used the sale proceeds to reduce the outstanding balance of its revolving credit facility and anticipates recognizing a gain on the sale in the first quarter of 2019.

The deal included the following properties: Courtyard by Marriott hotels in Bristol and Harrisonburg; Homewood Suites by Hilton Sarasota and TownePlace Suites by Marriott Tampa in Florida; SpringHill Suites by Marriott Baton Rouge in Louisiana; Hampton Inn & Suites by Hilton Holly Springs in North Carolina; Courtyard by Marriott Texarkana, Hilton Garden Inn Duncanville and TownePlace Suites by Marriott Texarkana in Texas.

“Through these attractively priced transactions, we adjusted our market exposure in ways that we feel will further enhance the strength and stability of our hospitality platform,” Nelson Knight, the company’s executive vice president and chief investment officer, said in a statement.

Apple Hospitality is a publicly traded real estate investment trust that owns 234 hotels in 34 states.

Roanoke developers set sights on River District

People visiting downtown Danville will soon have a lodging option, thanks to a Roanoke-based development group.

For $350,000, Ed Walker and his team bought two vacant South Union Street buildings, which will be converted into a 42-room boutique hotel. The $6.2 million project has been dubbed Honey Bee, a play on the name of one of the building’s former tenants, the Danville Register & Bee.

The hotel will be developed by Live Oak LLC and managed by City Space LLC. The companies represent a partnership between Walker and fellow Roanoke native Brent Cochran, who will lead the Danville project.

The property will be the only hotel in the River District, the downtown area that the city has been revitalizing since the decline of its tobacco and textile  industries.

The hotel will help Danville make a good first impression on visitors, including business prospects, says Telly Tucker, the city’s economic development director.

“Now, these folks have somewhere to stay in the River District where they can park their vehicle for the weekend, and they really don’t have to get back in until they leave because everything is within walking distance for the most part,” he says. “That’s kind of the culture and the vibe that we’ve been creating in our River District, and … that helps us accomplish our economic development goals.”

The project is being partially financed through a $3 million loan from the city, which will be repaid within a year-and-a-half from the start of construction. The rest of the money is being borrowed from Roanoke-based Freedom First Credit Union. The developers plan to use historic tax credits, available for rehabbing historic properties, and possibly, opportunity-zone tax benefits for investors working in certain areas.

Walker is known for rehabbing buildings in smaller communities and  Roanoke, his hometown. Walker and students at Washington and Lee University’s law school, where he teaches, also are redeveloping a significant portion of downtown Buena Vista. Additionally, he’s working on several projects in Salem with Cochran.

Danville had been on Walker’s radar for a number of years, but he considered investing in the community more seriously after meeting Ina Dixon. She is the former leader of History United, a project that uses history to encourage investment in the Danville area, which includes Pittsylvania County and Caswell County, N.C. Walker also was impressed with Tucker and Corrie Teague Bobe, the city’s assistant economic development director, whom he met two years ago at a craft beer conference in Washington, D.C.

“They are the best economic development team in the state of Virginia,” Walker says. He admires how they’ve fought an inaccurate stereotype that suggested  there’s no opportunity in Danville. That’s a perception that Walker says has plagued other cities impacted by deindustrialization, including Roanoke.

After visiting Danville, Walker was attracted to the city because of the local government’s efficiency; its low residential-vacancy rate; food and beverage scene, and the Institute for Advanced Learning and Research, among other factors. He also has scoped out other buildings downtown and plans to develop additional properties there.

“If you’re going to go into a new market, it makes sense to go with enough scale to justify your presence, so we intend to do more projects there,” he says.

Photos: Top: Ed Walker; Bottom: Telly Tucker

 

 

UVA Darden school reappoints new dean

The University of Virginia Darden School of Business has reappointed its dean to a second five-year-term.

Scott Beardsley became dean at the Charlottesville-based school on Aug. 1, 2015. The reappointment extends his term to 2025.

In a news release, the school said Beardsley’s first term has been marked by significant advances. Darden has climbed in graduate business school rankings during his tenure, securing a top 10 positions in two MBA-program rankings:  Bloomberg Businessweek (No. 9) and The Economist (No. 9).

Additionally, the school will have hired 31 faculty members by the end of Beardsley’s first term. His accomplishments also include helping launch a section of Darden’s Executive MBA in 2016.  Darden also opened a facility in Arlington last year, which  serves as the primary location of its expanded Executive MBA program, as well as the Master of Science in business analytics program.

Two executives announce plans to retire from hospitality company

Two executives at a Richmond-based publicly-traded hospitality company have announced plans to retire next year.     

Apple Hospitality REIT Inc. said Monday that Kristian Gathright will retire as executive vice president and chief operating officer in the first quarter of 2020. Additionally, Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Bryan Peery also intends to retire from the company at that time.

Gathright has joined the company’s board of directors, increasing its size from eight to nine members. She will stand for election at the company’s 2019 annual meeting.

Apple Hospitality is working with an executive search firm, with a focus on external candidates, for a successor CFO. The new CFO and the company will decide how to transition Gathright’s and Peery’s responsibilities. Gathright and Peery will remain with the company over the next year to assist with the transition.


“Krissy and Bryan have been instrumental in making Apple Hospitality what it is today, and while I will miss my daily interactions with each of them upon their departures, we have an incredible team that I am confident will continue to drive the Company’s success,” Justin Knight, the company’s president and CEO, said in a statement.


Apple Hospitality is a publicly traded real estate investment trust (REIT) that owns 243 hotels in 34 states.

Richmond startup wins first place in Danville pitch competition

A Richmond-based medical device company has been named the winner of the IdeaFest Pitch Competition in Danville. Almost 100 companies applied for the contest and 20 competed.


Pocket Protector received a $5,000 cash prize in winning the competition. The IdeaFest Pitch Competition, now in its sixth year, was held March 21 at Cottontail Weddings and Events.


Pocket Protector’s device is designed to prevent pocket hematomas, or the buildup of blood, after pacemaker implantation.


NIRSleep, another Richmond-based company, was the second-place winner. The startup received a $3,000 cash award. The company’s wearable device helps detect sleep disorders.


The third-place winner was Battery Xchange, a startup based in Charlotte, N.C. Battery Xchange’s rental platform provides portable batteries that enable people to charge their cell phones on the go. The company received a $2,000 cash prize. 


Winners of the competition will be eligible to receive 25 hours of free business consulting from The Launch Place. The organization helps companies with business formation, job creation and retention in the Dan River Region, which includes Danville, Pittsylvania County and Caswell County, N.C.


The Launch Place also invests in companies using seed and pre-seed funds established with a grant awarded by the Danville Region Foundation.

Manufacturer expanding in Southwest Virginia

Clarke Precision Machine Inc. announced Wednesday that it’s investing $750,000 to expand in Wythe County. The project will add a dozen jobs.

The company provides welding, machining and fabrication services. With this expansion, Clarke Precision Machine Inc. will purchase new machinery and expand its facility in Wytheville.

The growth will enable the company to handle potential contracts in automotive, construction materials and other industries.

The shop was founded in 1964 in Wytheville as Williams Manufacturing. Clarke Precision Machine acquired the company in 2015.

The company is receiving up to $9,600 in funding through Virginia Economic Development Partnership’s Virginia Jobs Investment Program to support employee training.The funding is contingent on the number of jobs created.