Raytheon, a subsidiary of Arlington County-based aerospace and defense contractor RTX, won a $344.6 million U.S. Air Force contract modification, the Department of Defense announced Friday.
Raytheon will produce more than 1,500 StormBreaker smart weapons, which are air-to-surface, network-enabled weapons that can engage moving targets in all weather conditions, according to a RTX news release.
Work on the modification to a previously awarded contract will be performed in Tucson, Arizona, and has an expected completion of Aug. 30, 2028. The contract involves foreign military sales to Norway, Germany, Italy and Finland.
StormBreaker, a gliding precision bomb, is fielded on the F-15E Strike Eagle and the F/A-18E/F SuperHornet fighter aircraft, and testing is underway on all F-35 variants. In 2023, StormBreaker completed 28 test drops, according to a news release.
“With this contract, we’ll continue to evolve StormBreaker’s production to meet the needs of servicemembers for years to come,” Paul Ferraro, Raytheon’s president of air power, said in a statement.
RTX has more than 180,000 employees globally and reported $67 billion in net sales in 2022. The company rebranded from Raytheon Technologies to RTX in June 2023 and has three business units: Collins Aerospace, Pratt & Whitney and Raytheon.
Virginians bet $638.8 million on sports in November 2023, up 23.1% from November 2022, according to data the Virginia Lottery released on Dec. 29, 2023.
November’s handle is an 11.8% increase from October 2023, when Virginians bet $571 million on sports. Virginia betters won $595.8 million in November and about $507 million in October.
About $632 million of November’s sports gaming revenues came from mobile operators, and the remaining more than $6.59 million came from casino retail activity. Virginia’s current casinos are the temporary Bristol Casino: The Future Home of Hard Rock, the permanent Rivers Casino Portsmouth and the temporary Caesars Virginia casino in Danville. Virginia’s gaming revenues from casinos in November totaled $51.2 million, according to the Virginia Lottery.
The licensed operators included in November’s reporting were:
Betfair Interactive US (FanDuel) in partnership with the Washington Commanders,
Virginia places a 15% tax on sports betting activity based on each permit holder’s adjusted gross revenue. With 10 operators reporting net positive AGR for November, the month’s taxes totaled $5.48 million, of which 97.5% (about $5.3 million) will be deposited in the state’s general fund. The remainder, about $137,000, will be deposited in the Problem Gambling Treatment and Support Fund, which the Virginia Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services administers.
For about a decade leading up to 2013, Dr. James Min was one of three physician-owners of a private practice in Prince William County, Bristow Run Family Medicine, working as a doctor by day and a finance manager by night.
“With the complexity of health care, billing, contracting with insurances, all these kinds of things, it became a lot of work as a physician,” he says. “You’re seeing patients during the day, and then you have to run the business at night. … It just kind of wears you down and gets very tiring.”
In addition to practicing medicine and keeping up with medical advances, Min handled financial duties for the practice, including payroll and billing, which meant he had to keep up with changes in Medicare billing regulations, follow up on denied insurance claims and evaluate employee benefits. Another partner handled the bulk of human resources, and the third oversaw IT.
In 2013, Min decided to join Winston-Salem, North Carolina-based health system Novant Health, which opened a Haymarket office for its Bull Run Family Medicine practice with him as its sole physician initially. Min sold his shares in the Bristow Run practice to his business partners.
“I decided that I wanted to just work and see patients, and it was OK for me to give up some of that autonomy but to have someone do the billing and HR and things like that,” he explains.
Min’s former Bristow Run Family Medicine partners also later joined Novant Health as a different family practice.
In January 2016, Novant formed a joint venture with the University of Virginia Health System for its Virginia operations, and in July 2021, UVA Health assumed full ownership of the system. Min is the medical group physician market executive for what is now UVA Community Health and continues to practice in Bull Run Family Medicine’s Haymarket office.
His story isn’t unique. In Virginia and nationally, the number of doctors in independent practices continues to shrink as physicians sell their practices, joining health systems, or retire in the face of ongoing and mounting challenges that are contributing to consolidation in health care.
In 2012, 60.1% of physicians worked in private practices, while 23.4% worked in practices at least partially owned by a hospital or health system, according to data from the American Medical Association’s Physician Practice Benchmark Survey. In 2022, however, only 46.7% of physician respondents worked in private practices, while 31.3% worked in practices at least partially owned by a hospital or health system.
Private practice benefits
Some physicians in private practices argue that they can provide better care because of their autonomy to make care decisions and the personal touch they provide, but there is also a measurable difference in patient costs between independent practices and health systems. A study of 580 health systems from Harvard University researchers and the National Bureau of Economic Research published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in January 2023 found that physician services delivered within health systems cost between 12% and 26% more than in independent practices.
Multiple factors contribute to that difference, but a major one is the difference in site-of-service fees associated with procedures like colonoscopies, explains Dr. Paul Berggreen, board chair and president of the recently formed Washington, D.C.-based American Independent Medical Practice Association. Medicare and many commercial insurers provide larger reimbursements for procedures’ facility fees to hospitals than to independently operated care centers.
“We want people to understand that we deliver high-quality care and … that independence and that segment of care delivery in this health care system needs to be maintained,” Berggreen says. “It’s good competition for the system.”
Doctors in private practices stress their autonomy in choices about patient care, like being able to spend more time with patients, as a major factor in their preferences for private practice.
Dr. Dan Moore started his practice, Henrico County-based RevMed, in 2021 after working at an urgent and primary care center owned by a chain, where he was pressured to see patients faster, he says.
In a typical urgent and primary care practice, “your job becomes how to generate [insurance] codes as fast as you possibly can,” Moore says, “because the amount of time I spend with a patient is irrelevant when it comes to compensation. … You essentially squeeze more and more productivity out of providers in a typical practice.”
Also, private practitioners feel that developing ongoing relationships with patients contributes to the quality of care they provide.
“When my [patients] call me, they don’t get whoever’s on call that day,” Moore says. “With me, my [patients] call me, they get me.”
Dr. Sandy Chung, CEO of Fairfax-based pediatric practice group Trusted Doctors and immediate past president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, says, “I think the hard part is as groups get bigger, what you lose is some of that personal touch that is so nice in a smaller practice.” However, patients might prefer the “sameness” of each visit or service at a large health system or practice, she points out.
Negotiating power
Cited as the largest obstacle to small physician-owned practices remaining private are low Medicare and commercial health insurance reimbursement rates. Medicare physician reimbursement rates have not kept up with the rate of inflation.
From 2001 to 2023, the cost of running a medical practice increased 47%, according to Medicare Economic Index data, but Medicare physician pay has only increased about 9%. Adjusted for inflation in practice costs, Medicare physician pay declined 26% from 2001 to 2023, according to the American Medical Association.
Dr. Dan Moore started his Henrico County-based medical practice, RevMed, to have greater autonomy over patient visits and care. Photo by Caroline Martin
Medicare physician payment rates for 2024 will be 1.25% less than 2023 rates, although the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services are creating an add-on payment for outpatient and office visits for primary care and longitudinal care.
Reductions in Medicare payments affect independent physicians differently from hospital-employed doctors, Berggreen says.
“If we collect a dollar, we pay our overhead on that dollar and we take the rest home as what we get out of our salary,” he says, while hospital-employed physicians are largely unaffected, since their pay doesn’t hinge on how much Medicaid reimburses.
On the private insurance side, health systems are able to negotiate reimbursement rates with insurance companies directly, leveraging their size for higher payments. Private practices with a handful of physicians, however, don’t have the leverage to bring insurers to the bargaining table, meaning they must accept the contracts they’re offered if they want to continue accepting patients covered by those insurers.
“You try to contact an insurance company and ask about contracts, and if you’re just a three-doctor office, they don’t even sniff at you,” Min says.
In light of this, some physicians, like Moore, choose not to accept insurance. “It allows me to have independence and sort of get back to basics as far as how to design my practice,” he says.
Instead, RevMed operates on a membership model. Patients pay a monthly membership fee and don’t incur other charges, with a few exceptions like house call payments.
Other private practices have banded together to negotiate with insurance as a bloc. Take for example the Shenandoah Independent Practice Association, a group of more than 300 physicians in the larger Winchester area. Members pay dues for three years, which vest into a voting membership in the third year.
“We have the ability to negotiate [as] a collective group, and 300 physicians is no small deal,” says SIPA Executive Director
V. Allen Santos. Physician members are then able to opt in or out of the contracts SIPA negotiates.
At this point, Santos says, SIPA’s primary responsibility is getting the best possible deal on insurance contracts, but the organization’s structure allows him to seek other contracts for the group if requested, such as finding a groupwide electronic medical record vendor or hazardous waste disposal contractor.
Back-office help
Value-based care insurance programs require additional infrastructure that small practices can’t always afford, Trusted Doctors CEO Dr. Sandy Chung explains. Photo by Stephen Gosling
Gaining help or having someone else entirely handle the business side of running a medical practice is another reason physicians join health systems.
Along with submitting claims to insurance and related tasks like providing prior authorizations for some prescriptions, physician practice owners have to navigate and stay abreast of patient billing, federal information technology and cybersecurity regulations, new Medicare billing regulations and other changes in health care law.
“The challenge is, when you have one or two clinicians, maybe one or two other staff, that’s your whole practice, and the ability to keep up with the laws, the changing rules, the IT requirements, all of those things, is really challenging,” Chung says.
Also on the rise are value-based care insurance programs, which provide a flat payment per patient, rather than per service, and often offer health care providers incentives for meeting quality metrics, which vary by program but can include hospital admission rates and number of cancer screenings. Some also offer profit sharing with providers.
“In order to do this kind of work, you have to have an infrastructure,” like employees who check on patients’ management of complicated medical conditions, Chung says. “For a small practice, it can’t afford to hire staff to do that, and you barely can get through the day seeing the patients that you need to see, much less have the bandwidth to be able to succeed in value-based care.”
Major health systems, though, generally have designated staff to monitor quality care metrics.
Another possible path that allows practitioners to stay independent in their clinical practices is joining a management services organization, or MSO — essentially a business office — often owned by a private equity firm, effectively outsourcing their back-office operations.
“The reason that practices have done that … is that we need access to capital to grow our practices, to improve our practices, to invest in the technologies and the manpower and the infrastructure that we need to compete,” Berggreen says.
Medical practice Mid-Atlantic Women’s Care, which has about 85 OB-GYNs across 37 locations, including some in Virginia, affiliated with management services organization Unified Women’s Healthcare in 2022, says Dr. Hugh Dixon Wolcott, who retired from clinical practice with Mid-Atlantic Women’s Care at the end of 2022 and is a consultant with Unified Women’s Healthcare.
Health system-affiliated hospitals have “tremendous amount[s] of resources” like data analytics, Wolcott says. “In order to basically try to have a level playing field, we need to have available those same types of resources,” like the ability to track quality metrics and offer simulation training. MSOs provide those resources, he says.
Unified Women’s Healthcare uses a fee structure, Wolcott says. Some MSOs, though, buy the physical assets of practices, like offices and equipment, and lease them back to doctors.
MSOs also take administrative tasks off doctors’ plates, like IT, billing and human resources, and can help provide scalability for costs like medical supplies.
For Min, the tradeoffs to join a larger system have worked out. Although working for a health system means he has less say over high-level decisions, he has a significant voice in the UVA Community Health subsidiary system and appreciates having a human resources department to help with hiring paperwork and others handling billing.
George Mason University’s vision for creating an entrepreneurship program for immigrants and refugees “connected the dots” of Sumeet Shrivastava’s history, beginning with his family’s emigration from Bihar, India, in the 1970s so his father, Satyendra Shrivastava, could earn a master’s degree. Mentors guided his father, who founded McLean-based information technology firm Anstec. In turn, his father went on to mentor others.
“I grew up watching all that happening and realizing that even if people have good intent, they still need mentors, they still need to understand the basics, especially immigrants … or refugees who are newer to the country that don’t always have a feel for how does it work here,” says Sumeet Shrivastava, a George Mason alumnus and former president and CEO of Array Information Technologies in Fairfax. The company was sold to Fairfax-based CGI Federal in 2021.
Shrivastava made a $1.5 million gift to George Mason that led to the September 2023 launch of the Shrivastava Family Refugee and Immigrant Success through Entrepreneurship (RISE) program at George Mason’s Center for Innovation and Entrepreneurship (CIE).
An 11-month entrepreneurship training and business incubator, RISE includes a bootcamp covering basic tools, concepts and principles for launching and growing a business with limited resources. Almost all participants are Afghan immigrants referred through RISE partner Lutheran Social Services of the National Capital Area, a human services and immigration and refugee relief agency. RISE is the first of three programs that CIE hopes to launch under its Soar Initiative, which aims to provide access to entrepreneurship opportunities to communities lacking such training.
RISE started with 47 initial participants, with 27 advancing to the second phase, meeting with mentors every other week for three months and getting coached on setting up businesses. Beginning in late January, participants will be paired with Mason Honors College students to launch their startups.
Mohammad Rafiq Katawazai owned a restaurant in Afghanistan and is working with a mentor to open a restaurant serving coffee, tea and soup, a popular concept back home. He wanted to go into business before signing up for RISE but was confused about where to start. “I’ve learned a lot,” he says. “A lot of things in our culture are so much different. Business is different.”
Shrivastava’s donation is being used to create an endowment, and Shrivastava plans to reach out to other potential donors to help keep RISE going. “I think there’s a huge opportunity to scale it,” he says.
The Washington Capitals and Washington Wizards are planning a move to a new home in Alexandria in a $2 billion deal that would see the professional sports franchises exit Washington, D.C., by 2028, Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Dec. 13, 2023.
The nonbinding agreement to build a new arena for the Capitals and Wizards is part of a 9 million-square-foot entertainment complex planned for the Potomac riverfront in Alexandria’s developing National Landing neighborhood. Virginia Tech’s $1 billion Innovation Campus would be a neighbor, and Amazon.com’s HQ2 campus is just two Metro stops away.
The project is a partnership between the state, the City of Alexandria, JBG Smith and Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which owns the Capitals National Hockey League franchise and the National Basketball Association’s Wizards. Monumental would invest $403 million in the deal. It would include the arena, new corporate headquarters for Monumental, a performing arts venue and retail, restaurants, hotels and conference and community spaces.
The first phase, including the arena, could generate $12 billion in economic impact and create 30,000 jobs over the next several decades, Youngkin said. The project is expected to break ground in 2025 and be completed by 2028.
“Our commitment would be to build really iconic, fan-centric businesses,” Ted Leonsis, founder, CEO and chairman of Monumental, said.
The deal rests on approvals from the Virginia General Assembly and Alexandria City Council. The state legislature, which convenes Jan. 10, will be asked to approve a new Virginia Sports and Entertainment Authority that would own the land and buildings within the district and enter into a 40-year lease with Monumental. The $2 billion investment would be supported through bonds that would be repaid through annual rent from Monumental and arena parking revenues, naming rights and incremental taxes generated by the arena and development of the first phase. Alexandria would contribute $56 million toward construction of the performing arts venue and $50 million toward underground parking development.
But the proposal is far from a sure thing.
In a Dec. 19, 2023, tweet, Democratic Sen. Louise Lucas, incoming chair of the Senate Finance and Appropriations Committee, said the deal does not have her support. “Anyone who thinks I am going to approve an arena in Northern Virginia using state tax dollars before we deliver on toll relief and for public schools in Hampton Roads must think I have dumbass written on my forehead.”
Youngkin, however, called the deal an “affirmation of what’s happening in Virginia,” citing other prominent economic development deals in Northern Virginia, including Amazon’s HQ2 and the 2022 headquarters relocations of global Fortune 500 defense and aerospace contractors Boeing and RTX in back-to-back announcements.
“This once-in-a-generation historic development will be the best place to live, work, raise a family and watch hockey and basketball,” Youngkin said.
A longer version of this story was published on VirginiaBusiness.com on Dec. 13, 2023. This article was updated after publication.
Bonumose, a Charlottesville startup specializing in sugar alternatives, has raised $34.68 million in equity funding, according to an October 2023 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The round so far includes 12 investors, and the company is looking to raise as much as $51.63 million in the round. The funding follows $2 million the company raised in 2023 as part of a minority investment agreement with Germany-based Symrise AG. That funding was to go toward increasing sales, production volume and personnel. In 2022, Bonumose built a new lab and manufacturing plant in Charlottesville. It had around 30 employees as of mid-September 2023. (Richmond Inno)
Manassas-based aircraft manufacturer Electra’s EL-2 Goldfinch logged a milestone Nov. 19, 2023, when it completed its first hybrid-electric flight. The Goldfinch, a two-seat prototype of an electric short takeoff and landing (eSTOL) aircraft that the company is developing, took off from Manassas Regional Airport and flew 23 minutes, reaching an altitude of 3,200 feet and covering about 30 miles. Electra has preorders for more than 1,700 aircraft, totaling a $6 billion backlog. On Nov. 29, 2023, Electra announced that Bristow Group, a Texas company that provides helicopter offshore energy transportation and search and rescue services globally, made a deposit for five of its future aircraft. (VirginiaBusiness.com)
Fairfax County announced the winners of its first cohort under its new Fairfax Founders Fund on Nov. 2, 2023. The winners include Anapact, of Alexandria, which makes headgear for boxers and mixed-martial arts fighters; BloomCatch, of Centreville, which aims to fight a labor shortage in gardening by offering digital access to plant care; NearStar Fusion, a clean energy company in Chantilly; Fairfax Station’s Healp, which connects patients with rare conditions with medical providers; and 3D Orthobiologic Solutions, of Herndon, which seeks to 3D print medical and dental devices. The companies receive up to $50,000 in funds. (News release; FFX Now)
Richmond-based accelerator Lighthouse Labs wrapped up its 15th cohort with a demo day on Nov. 1, 2023. Keya Wingfield, Richmond-based chef/influencer and founder of Keya & Co., won the Shark Favorite Award. Keya & Co. creates culturally inspired snack foods using the flavor profiles of India. Kristin Richardson, founder of Richmond-based Sherah, a personal assistant service for moms, took home the Fan Favorite Award. The cohort included eight teams, five of which hail from Virginia. Each startup received $20,000 in equity-free funding, participated in weekly programming, received mentorship and was connected with local partners and investors. (News release)
Rohirrim, a Reston-based artificial intelligence company, has raised $15 million in a Series A funding round led by New York software investment firm Insight Partners. The financing will allow Rohirrim to continue working on its ChatGPT-like tool that helps companies speed the process of bidding on jobs. CEO and founder Steven Aberle said he also intends to accelerate hiring and set up office space for what is now a fully remote company. The company has roughly doubled its headcount over the past year to 30 employees and plans to roughly double again this year. Aberle’s priority is hiring a sales team. (DC Inno)
Gupton
PEOPLE
Goochland indoor farming startup Greenswell Growers named Carl Gupton its new CEO on Nov. 16, 2023. Gupton has served as company president since 2020; he intends to expand the company’s reach and increase its impact on sustainable agriculture. Greenswell Growers, which grows lettuce and other leafy greens, raised $6.92 million in equity and debt in 2023 to expand its greenhouse and triple the size of its operation to 4.2 acres. The company also launched a co-branded product with Ukrop’s Homestyle Foods, which is available at around 90 Kroger stores in the mid-Atlantic region. (Richmond Inno)
The HotelRoanoke & ConferenceCenter, Curio Collection by Hilton plans a $14 million renovationthis year, bringing new technology, new design and new, custom-made Hotel Roanoke-logoed furniture to every one of its 329 guest rooms.
The hotel’s most recent renovation, completed in 2020, upgraded its Pine Room restaurant, created the 1882 lobby bar and added infrastructure to support hybrid meetings in the 63,000-square-foot conference center.
The current renovation will be conducted in phases, about 40 rooms at a time, beginning in March at the earliest, according to hotel representatives. The overhaul is part of a cycle all Hilton hotels follow to upgrade their facilities, but Hotel Roanoke General Manager Brian Wells says it’s about more than following a corporate directive. “We want people, when they stay here, to have a hotel stay to remember,” he says.
Guests have been remembering their stays at “The Grand Old Lady” since Christmas Day 1882, the year the Norfolk & Western Railroad (later Railway) came to town and built the hotel — two years before Roanoke became a city.
“Every time I’d meet someone new, they had a Hotel Roanoke story,” Wells says.
“Hotel Roanoke, with its deep history, it’s really part of the identity of Roanoke and the entire region,” says John Hull, executive director of the Roanoke Regional Partnership. “It’s just a unique property. It’s a place where we like to host all our clients. We think it’s just a showcase-level property for our region.”
Guest room updates include adding 55-inch TVs and smart features that will allow guests to use their phones as room keys or adjust the TV or room temperature to their preferences. The challenge is doing all that and retaining the property’s “rich history and elegance,” says R.D. Wright, the hotel’s assistant general manager and capital projects manager.
“Hotel Roanoke continues to reinvent itself while staying up to date with modern amenities and trends while still maintaining that historical element that sets it apart as such a special property, not only in Roanoke, but across the entire Virginia’s Blue Ridge region,” says Visit Virginia’s Blue Ridge spokesperson Kathryn Lucas.
The hotel and conference center is the largest meeting spot in the region. “So, when large meetings come to town,” Lucas says, “it’s the property that people want to stay at.”
After a $100 million grant for the project was announced by the U.S. Department of Energy Nov. 27, 2023, Tennessee-based Microporous confirmed that it has been working on a deal to bring the operation to Virginia. The project would involve at least a $100 million investment and 282 jobs, the energy department said in its announcement. Microporous was the largest recipient among the department’s seven awards, which totaled $275 million.
“I think it’s a win for my company. I think it’s a win for Virginia and the potential employees there,” Microporous CEO John Reeves told Virginia Business, adding that the project is also a “huge winner for the United States as well.”
For eight decades, Microporous has produced separators for lead-acid batteries, the oldest rechargeable battery technology used for power grid systems and ignition power for automobiles. It also has a facility in Austria. The company’s headquarters are near Bristol in Sullivan County, Tennessee.
Microporous’ newest venture involves manufacturing separators for lithium-ion batteries, which are used to power electric vehicles and other devices.
While North Carolina and Tennessee have also been contenders for the deal, Reeves says his company is “leaning towards Virginia.”
Reeves says Microporous’ long-term plans for Berry Hill, which it has been eyeing for about a year, would include two facilities comprising about 120 acres. He cites the site’s “world-class” rail service, as well as regional workforce training efforts. “It’s just a great fit all the way around.”
Build-out could take up to eight years if the company must fund the rest of the project itself or four to five years if the company receives additional government grants, Reeves says.
Reeves adds he could envision a scenario with one of the two buildings landing in North Carolina and another in Danville; he also says he could see a second plant in North Carolina in the future.
As of late November 2023, Reeves was unsure of a timeline for any official announcement about the project.
Matthew Rowe, Pittsylvania County‘s economic development director, declined to comment on Microporous’ plans and Corrie Bobe, Danville’s economic development and tourism director, did not respond to queries from Virginia Business.
After more than 40 years of growing his three-Michelin-star restaurant, Inn at Little Washington chef and owner Patrick O’Connell is nearing his wish of offering guests “all the amenities of great hotels in Europe with the warmth of visiting a private home.”
Expansion plans include adding a reception building, two new buildings with 10 guest suites and a service building. Two other buildings within the inn’s existing 22 acres will be renovated and expanded to add a spa and pool. Some functions, such as guest check-in, will be relocated to provide better flow and “concentrate all of our key service activities under one roof.” Currently, the inn has 23 guest rooms, including a few suites.
The Town of Washington’s Architectural Review Board approved the preliminary plan in May 2023 after O’Connell led members and residents on a tour around the property, showing how new facilities would relate to existing structures. “In the end, it will look as if it’s always been here,” and fit in with other town buildings, he says. Agencies such as the soil and water district must review plans before a final site plan is submitted, a process that O’Connell says could take about nine months.
Until plans are finalized, O’Connell won’t disclose added square footage, saying only that it will be “quite a bit.” He also won’t discuss cost estimates, although he says industry standards indicate “a five-star establishment has to consider investing about $1 million” per guest room or suite. He’s less precise about the spa price tag, saying it will depend on convincing a lender about potential return on investment.
The inn, already Rappahannock County‘s largest private employer with more than 200 workers, will hire spa staff and increase housekeeping, room service and valet staff, O’Connell says.
The inn “is an enormous driver of economic activity,” says Washington Mayor Joe Whited. The county receives about $200,000 to $400,000 in annual tax revenue from the inn, which also generates town meals and lodging taxes.
Sales taxes from the inn diversify county revenue streams and reduce dependence on property taxes, says county Supervisor Keir Whitson, who believes the expansion is “good news for local people.”
O’Connell says the project will “bring us full circle from what was once a small regional restaurant” to “finding ourselves in a league of competition with the top 20 hotels in the world.”
The top five most-read daily news stories on VirginiaBusiness.com from Nov. 16, 2023, to Dec. 14, 2023, included proposed state funding for a biotech research network between three Virginia universities.
The buzzy Solo Stove ad featuring the celebrity rapper collected more than 62 million views on X (formerly Twitter) and more than 208,000 likes on Instagram. (Nov. 21)
A 162-mile passenger rail route between Raleigh, North Carolina, and Richmond will be part of a Southeast corridor to connect North Carolina with Virginia, Washington, D.C., and the Northeast corridor. (Dec. 6)
The fund would create a biotech, life sciences and pharmaceutical manufacturing network between the University of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University and Virginia Tech. (Dec. 12)
The engineering and design firm is building a new five-story, 150,000-square-foot headquarters. (Dec. 1)
We use cookies on our website to give you the most relevant experience by remembering your preferences and repeat visits. By clicking “Accept All”, you consent to the use of ALL the cookies. However, you may visit "Cookie Settings" to provide a controlled consent.
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
Cookie
Duration
Description
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional
11 months
The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.