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Issues

Google leases the top two floors of this Reston office building by the Dulles Toll Road. Photo courtesy GlobeNewswire
Mar 1, 2020

You can Google it

If it’s not one tech giant, it’s another. Ever since Amazon.com Inc. ann­ounced in late 2018 that it would open a second headquarters in Arlington County, discussions about workforce and real estate in Northern Virginia have fixed on the e-tailer. But Google LLC’s been busy, too. Last year the Mountain View, California-ba[...]

Mar 1, 2020

Steady as she goes

A presidential election. International trade conflicts. Fear of recession. There are plenty of circumstances that could shift the stock market and shake up investments in 2020. Yet consumers should not allow developments nationally and globally to influence their investment choices, say some Virginia wealth advisers who are list[...]

The Port of Virginia's marine terminals have been undergoing a host of improvements, including dredging and widening channels and adding the largest ship-to-shore cranes on the East Coast. Photo by Mark Rhodes
Mar 1, 2020

Port of call

Hampton Roads’ deep-water port continued to be a dominant factor in attracting companies to the region in 2019, especially cold storage and warehousing and logistics firms. “As we try to bring industry into this area, the port is a significant driver of our economic development,” says Doug Smith, president and CEO of the H[...]

Gov. Ralph Northam announced in October that step-van manufacturer Morgan Olson LLC was locating a $57.89 million plant in the Danville-Pittsylvania area. Photo courtesy Office of the Governor of Virginia
Mar 1, 2020

The Hail Mary

Football isn’t the only occupation in which a wild, slim-chance pass can deliver a win. Last fall, the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and Danville and Pittsylvania County officials launched a Hail Mary economic pitch that landed a $57.89 million expansion project from Michigan-based van manufacturer Morgan Olson LLC[...]

Facebook is building a $1.75 billion data center complex at Henrico County's White Oak Technology Park.
Mar 1, 2020

Subsea cable country

The scheduled 2020 arrival in Henrico County of a third connection to ultra-high-speed internet subsea cables should give the Richmond region bragging rights as a destination for data centers. In other words, it makes Central Virginia an alternative to Loudoun County, where 70% of all internet traffic flows but lacks a direct li[...]

Bernie Niemeier, Virginia Business publisher
Mar 1, 2020

Rethinking big

Once upon a time, I worked for a big company. Not for a short time, but a decades-long time. Somewhat unfortunately, I remember those years perhaps too well. Thousands of employees, rules, policies, a big human resources department, politics and power were all concentrated inside the headquarters building. And the customers were[...]

Mar 1, 2020

Feeling stronger

In the year since Bon Secours Health System merged with Mercy Health, the Cincinnati-based hospital group has expanded its holdings in Virginia, where it now owns and operates 12 hospitals. In January, Bon Secours Mercy Health acquired three hospitals: the  300-bed Southside Regional Medical Center in Petersburg, the 105-bed So[...]

Mar 1, 2020

Mergers and acquisitions

In 2019, banks continued to merge and consolidate, and some closed branches in Virginia’s rural counties and small towns, a trend expected to continue well into the 2020s. The big news of last year was the completion of the $66 billion merger of BB&T Corp. and SunTrust Banks Inc. in December, creating Charlotte, North Caro[...]

Telly Tucker, director of Arlington Economic Development
Mar 1, 2020

Where the action is

In the wake of Amazon.com Inc.’s late 2018 announcement that its $2.5 billion HQ2 East Coast headquarters would locate in Arlington County, there’s been a game of musical chairs taking place among Northern Virginia’s economic development offices. Last July, Victor Hoskins, Arlington’s economic development director, left [...]

A rendering of the Navy Hill project
Mar 1, 2020

The arena of politics

A historic vote on the biggest economic development proposal in the city of Richmond’s history — the potentially transformative $1.5 billion Navy Hill downtown redevelopment plan that would have included the state’s largest entertainment venue — collapsed in mid-February amid sound and fury as seven of Richmond City Coun[...]

Mar 1, 2020

Revisionist history

Virginia’s tourism industry has long banked on its history — but this time there’s more context and acknowledgement of different facets of the commonwealth’s heritage. Last year, the commonwealth held observances marking the 400th anniversaries of the first elected legislative body in the New World and the arrival of the[...]

Mar 1, 2020

Shifting skylines

As several economic development officials have noted wryly over the past year, the construction crane appears to be Virginia’s new state bird. Labor shortages and expensive materials still impact the industry, but by and large, construction companies are busy across the commonwealth. In January, demolition started at the site [...]

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