Located at 400 Waterside Drive, the 273-unit high-rise apartment tower will be have studio, one-, two-, and three-bedroom floor plans, in a six-story apartment building, with a garage and common areas on the first floor and five floors of apartments above. Convenient to MacArthur Square Station, the Elizabeth River and Interstate 264, the development will also feature a fitness center, club room, courtyard with a swimming pool, grilling stations and firepits.
Amy Gay of Berkadia secured the construction financing through a HUD 221(d)(4) loan through the Green MIP Reduction program.
Breeden Construction will be the general contractor and construction is set to begin in late November and take 22 months to complete, according to a news release from Breeden. The cost of the project is $45.8 million.
Henrico County announced this week it is creating a redevelopment incentive program for parts of the county that are in need of renovation.
Henrico Investment Program was unanimously approved by the county board Tuesday, and the program is expected to launch in January. Incentives for development and reinvestment will be available for projects along parts of Mechanicsville Turnpike, Staples Mill Road, Patterson Avenue, West Broad Street and Williamsburg Road, according to a county news release. The board also amended the county’s commercial rehabilitation tax credit program to allow more buildings to qualify, including if they grow in size.
Under the state’s Enterprise Zone program, Henrico County and other localities offer grants and other incentives to support improvements and demolition of existing buildings on properties in designated areas, determined as needing further investment by the state. Henrico’s new program will allow the county to offer similar incentives outside of its 6-square-mile Enterprise Zone. Incentives include:
Allowing sign grants to include removal, refurbishment or replacement of signs attached to buildings
Increasing the demolition grant to a maximum of $100,000 based on a building’s size
Expanding the building facade grant to include building system improvements and roof improvements
Since 2004, the county has allowed a seven-year partial real estate tax exemption when renovated buildings’ assessed values increase by at least 40%, but not if they grow more than twice their original size. The amendment by the board this week allows nonresidential buildings greater than 20,000 square feet to qualify if the expanded portion is 125% or less of the building’s original size, and nonresidential buildings smaller than 20,000 square feet can qualify regardless of their original size.
“With the new Henrico Investment Program and amended commercial tax credit program for rehabilitated buildings, Henrico and the Board of Supervisors show once again their commitment to encouraging reinvestment in the county’s mature areas and to helping businesses, particularly small businesses, to grow and thrive,” Anthony J. Romanello, executive director of the Henrico Economic Development Authority, said in a statement.
Reston-based Fortune 500 contractor CACI International Inc. won a potentially $785 million contract to support the U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC), the company announced Tuesday.
Under the five-year single-award task order for Special Operations Forces Emerging Threats, Operations and Planning Support, CACI will provide expertise in integrated information warfare and electronic warfare solutions, training, readiness and modernization for USASOC missions.
“CACI’s mission expertise in operational support, intelligence analysis, technology integration and training will help Special Operations Forces adapt to the current and future threat environment,” CACI President and CEO John Mengucci said in a statement. “Our experts will leverage advanced solutions for our mission partners and deliver training models based on first-hand experiences to prepare trainees with realistic scenarios.”
The contract has a one-year base period with four one-year options.
Founded in 1962, CACI specializes in enterprise and mission technology. The company has approximately 22,000 employees. CACI made the Fortune 500 list for the first time this year.
Performance Food Group Co., the Goochland-based Fortune 500 food distribution corporation, plans to invest $80.2 million on a new facility in Hanover County, creating 125 jobs, Gov. Ralph Northam announced Thursday. The regional sales and distribution center will be housed in a 325,000-square-foot building in Ashland.
“This new facility will be instrumental in advancing Virginia’s fast-growing supply chain management and logistics industries,” Northam said in a statement. “Performance Food Group’s significant investment in Hanover County and growing presence in Virginia is a testament to our strong business climate, robust infrastructure and top-notch talent. We look forward to seeing the positive outcomes from this project’s investment and job creation.”
Virginia competed with Pennsylvania and North Carolina for the project.
“Since the company’s founding in Richmond in 1885, Performance Food Group has called Virginia home,” Performance Food Group Chairman, President and CEOGeorge Holm said in a statement. “With our new state-of-the-art food distribution facility in Hanover, Performance Food Group reaffirms its commitment to Virginia, our associates and our valued customers. Virginia’s talented workforce and business-friendly environment will continue to fuel Performance Food Group’s plans for growth.”
Performance Food Group, which went public in 2019, has a network of more than 150 locations in the United States and Canada, providing food to more than 300,000 locations, including restaurants, businesses, schools, hospitals, retail outlets, theaters and other facilities. In September, PFG completed its acquisition of convenience store supplier Core-Mark for $2.5 billion in stock and cash, a purchase expected to add about $17 billion to PFG’s annual sales.
The Virginia Economic Development Partnership worked with Hanover County to secure the project, and VEDP will support job creation through its Virginia Jobs Investment Program. Performance Food Group is also eligible for benefits through the Major Business Facility Job Tax Credit for the full-time jobs created.
Buchanan County-based metal fabrication company Skyline Fabricating Inc. will spend more than $675,000 to build a 25,000-square-foot production facility in the county’s Southern Gap area, creating 22 jobs, Gov. Ralph Northam announced Tuesday.
The facility will help Skyline Fabricating meet increased demand for steel and aluminum fabricated products and its expanded customer base outside Virginia.
“Manufacturers like Skyline Fabricating recognize that Virginia is a great place to expand a business,” Northam said in a statement. “It’s great news when a company that starts in Virginia continues to grow here. Skyline has been a great partner for Buchanan County and Southwest Virginia, and we appreciate their new investment.”
Founded in 2016, Skyline Fabricating specializes in bridge, walkway and handrail construction and provides aluminum fabrication, mobile welding and plasma cutting. The company has customers in the energy, structural and equipment production industries.
“Skyline Fabricating is excited to expand our operations to the Southern Gap site in Buchanan County,” Skyline Fabricating President Kenneth W. Horne said in a statement. “The developing infrastructure will broaden our markets in the fabricating and manufacturing industries. We look forward to creating additional jobs from the talented and experienced workforce in this area.”
The Virginia Economic Development Partnership (VEDP) worked with Buchanan County, the Buchanan County Industrial Development Authority and the Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority to secure the project. VEDP’s Virginia Jobs Investment Program will provide funding to support employee recruitment and training activities.
The Virginia Coalfield Economic Development Authority provided a $538,030 loan to the Buchanan County Industrial Development Authority for site development and construction. Skyline Fabricating will lease-purchase the building from the county IDA.
Virginia Economic Development Partnership President and CEOStephen Moret will leave VEDP to become president and CEO of Indianapolis-based Strada Education Network in January, Strada and VEDP announced Wednesday.
Moret expects that VEDP’s board will appoint Executive Vice President Jason El Koubi to serve as interim CEO and a nationwide search will be conducted for a permanent successor.
“In my opinion, the VEDP CEO job will be the most attractive economic development opening in America for a variety of reasons, including the advantages and stability of VEDP’s unique authority structure and the attractiveness of Virginia as a premier state for quality of life and for business. It is a really special opportunity for the right person,” Moret said.
Moret said his top priority as he moves toward the exit is to ensure a smooth transition and provide any support requested from the incoming administration of Virginia Gov.-elect Glenn Youngkin.
In 2019, Moret was named Virginia Business’ Business Person of the Year, based mainly on his shepherding of VEDP, which was struggling and dysfunctional when Moret arrived in 2017, and his work in attracting Amazon.com Inc.‘s $2.5 billion-plus HQ2 East Coast headquarters to Arlington County, a project expected to create 25,000 jobs in the largest economic development deal in state history.
Instead of relying solely on economic incentives to lure the e-tail giant, Moret focused on workforce education, securing more than $1 billion in state funding for the Tech Talent Investment Program to strengthen high-tech education across Virginia, as well as starting the Virginia Tech Innovation Campus in Alexandria. Moret also led the launch of the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program, the state’s custom recruitment and workforce training initiative.
“Virginia is second to none in economic development, thanks to Stephen’s leadership,” Gov. Ralph Northam said in a statement Wednesday. “We have attracted more than $77 billion in capital investment and 100,000 new jobs in just the past four years alone. Virginia has delivered something unique in the country — becoming one of the best states for workers and earning [CNBC’s] Top State for Business title more times than anyone else. Stephen has been at the center of all this work, and Virginia is a better place for it. It’s no surprise that others are eager for his talents, and we wish him all the best in Indianapolis.”
Dan Pleasant, chairman of VEDP’s board of directors, was part of the search committee when Moret was hired, and recalled Moret being the right fit.
“We thought he was the right person, and it turned out he was definitely the right person,” Pleasant said with a laugh.
Moret leads by example, Pleasant added, and is very creative when it comes to doing deals. The Amazon HQ2 deal is just one example of his creativity, Pleasant said, noting how Moret positioned Virginia apart from the competition.
Higher impact
Strada Education Network was founded in 1960 as United Student Aid Funds or USA Funds and was formerly the nation’s largest guarantor of loans made by the Federal Family Education Loan Program. In 2017, the organization was renamed Strada, and it has become a nonprofit social impact organization, a public charity, focused on “increasing individuals’ economic mobility through purposeful connections between education and employment.”
“Our approach combines innovative research, thought leadership, strategic philanthropy and investments, and support for Strada Collaborative, a nonprofit that provides critical resources, educational support, and career experiences leading to equitable education and employment pathways,” a spokeswoman for Strada wrote in an email.
Moving into this line of work aligns with Moret’s personal values, he said in emailed comments to Virginia Business on Wednesday.
“For decades, I have had a deep personal, professional and intellectual interest in the connections between postsecondary education and employment,” Moret said. “I have witnessed the transformational impact of higher ed in my life and in the lives of many others. Through my professional work in multiple settings, I also have seen the impact higher ed can have on the economic competitiveness and growth of regions, states and our country as a whole. Indeed, my interest in the linkages between higher ed and economic opportunity has been so great that I completed my doctoral dissertation at Penn on that very topic several years ago.”
Moret described growing up with feelings of “economic insecurity” that lingered with him as he grew up. He saw higher education as “a pathway to economic security and mobility.”
“I can still vividly recall weighing my college options and potential major when I was 18, balancing my interests and aspirations against fears of student loan debt that I might later have trouble repaying,” he said.
Moret earned a bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering from Louisiana State University and an MBA from Harvard Business School. He also holds a doctorate degree in higher education management from the University of Pennsylvania.
Moret said when he visited with Strada’s search committee and ultimately its full board, he shared that he believes “Strada is better positioned than any other single organization to help revitalize and broaden participation in the American Dream.
“While there are bigger organizations than Strada, I’m not aware of any nonprofit of Strada’s scale [or larger] that has Strada’s focused mission paired with such a distinctive, multidimensional approach to accomplishing it,” Moret said.
Moret said he was not seeking for another position and that he has loved his work at VEDP and felt embraced by the business and political leadership of the commonwealth. He also said he had cultivated good relationships with both 2021 gubernatorial candidates.
“Strada was [and is] simply an opportunity of singular interest to me, and it offers an opportunity to make an impact at a national level,” he said. “The timing was simply coincidental, as the Strada CEO position happened to open up this year. I have been inspired by Strada’s mission for many years.”
‘A transformative leader’
Observers often give Moret credit for Virginia’s two-time streak as CNBC’s No. 1 state for business, a title regained in 2019 after the state sank to No. 13 in 2016. But he’s humble about his success.
“While I’m proud of many of the specific things we accomplished, such as winning [Amazon] HQ2 or creating a top-ranked custom workforce initiative [the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program], I hope that my legacy will be that we built a great team, dramatically improved collaboration and communication with partners, and shared a clear and compelling vision for how Virginia can become one of the leading states in America in terms of economic development, economic competitiveness, and growth,” he said.
“While we accomplished much of that vision, there is still much to do. I recently laid out some of the biggest remaining economic development opportunities in separate briefings with former Gov. McAuliffe and now Gov.-elect Youngkin prior to the election.”
Business leaders from around the commonwealth sang Moret’s praises about his work over the past five years.
Dan Clemente, the chairman and CEO of Vienna-based Clemente Development Co. Inc. and member of the VEDP’s board of governors, said that the best thing he did during his time as chairman of the board was signing the contract with Moret: “There’s only one Stephen Moret.”
“He pulled everything together. We were struggling when we hired him,” Clemente said, referring to the Joint Legislative Audit and Review Commission’s review of VEDP at the time. “He came in knowing that all of this was under examination, and he came in and took over.”
Jennifer Wakefield, president and CEO of the Greater Richmond Partnership, said she has the utmost respect for Moret and the team he assembled.
“He predated me, so I don’t know the before times, but I know the Moret times, and they have been wonderful,” Wakefield said. “He’s really helped to elevate Virginia to the best state for business through his very thoughtful, strategic approach. … It’s definitely a loss for Virginia, but I think that with the plan and the team that he’s assembled in place, we’re stronger for him having served the commonwealth.”
Moret worked with Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to land Amazon.com Inc.’s coveted second headquarters. Photo courtesy Governor of Virginia
John F. Reinhart, former CEO of the Virginia Port Authority, called Moret “an incredible intellect and creative and collaborative professional.”
Reinhart served on VEDP’s board, and Moret served on the Port’s board as both organizations recovered from financial challenges that occurred before the leaders’ tenures.
“He understood the supply chain and what it took to make things happen,” said Reinhart, who retired earlier this year. “As we were trying to go after economic development projects … he got it. He understood it and could voice that.”
Two projects that stand out to Reinhart as legacies Moret will leave behind are his work on workforce development and Dominion Energy’s offshore wind farm project to erect bring 180 wind turbines 27 miles off Virginia Beach’s coast. These projects will have impacts for decades to come, Reinhart said.
“He was a very transformative leader and set an example for all those he worked with,” Reinhart said.
Pleasant, with the VEDP, said one of the things Moret did that was changing the VEDP’s relationship with rural areas, such as Danville, where lives. “He’s a big advocate of bringing opportunity to rural Virginia,” Pleasant said. When Ikea announced it was leaving the area, Pleasant recalls Moret assuring him that someone would move in within six months.
“I don’t know that I have ever met anyone that had a stronger work ethic,” Pleasant said.
Before he came to Virginia, Moret was president and CEO of the Louisiana State University Foundation, where he put together a plan for a $1.5 billion LSU fundraising campaign, the largest in state history.
In 2008, Moret became Louisiana’s secretary of economic development under Republican Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal. After taking a trip to Georgia to learn about its training program, he implemented Louisiana’s FastStart program, an economic development initiative to quickly train workers in skills needed by specific businesses or sectors at no cost. In 2010, Business Facilities named FastStart the country’s best state workforce program, bumping Georgia from the top spot. Moret later replicated the initiative here as the Virginia Talent Accelerator Program, one of his signature accomplishments.
Prior to becoming a Louisiana cabinet member, Moret served as chief executive of the Baton Rouge Area Chamber. Before joining the chamber, Moret was a consultant with global management consulting firm McKinsey & Co. in Arlington. He also has served as a public policy fellow with the Public Affairs Research Council of Louisiana and a consultant to Harvard Business School.
Moret expects to relocate to Indianapolis, where Strada is based, in January, when he starts his new job, but will split his time between Henrico and Indiana until the summer, when the rest of his family will move, he said.
Reinhart called Moret “moral, ethical and tireless. People trust him.”
An earlier version of this story contained incorrect information about Strada Education Network.
Bon Secours has acquired Richmond-based Tuckahoe Orthopaedics and will operate the three-location medical practice as part of Bon Secours Medical Group, the health system announced Tuesday. Financial terms were not disclosed.
The private practice has been in business for more than 40 years and has been affiliated with Bon Secours for many years. Tuckahoe Orthopaedics has 13 physicians that specialize in joint replacement, sports medicine, foot and ankle issues, spines, physical therapy and other areas of treatment.
“We are thrilled to officially welcome Tuckahoe Orthopaedics to Bon Secours Medical Group and to our compassionate ministry,” Faraaz Yousuf, Bon Secours Richmond’s market president, said in a statement. “Tuckahoe Orthopaedics has provided quality care for thousands of patients in the area over their many years, and we look forward to extending the many benefits that a community health system can offer not only their patients but their staff as well.”
“We are excited to join Bon Secours Medical Group where we will continue providing the highest quality orthopedic care to our patients, as we have for more than 40 years,” said Dr. Jed Vanichkachorn, president of Tuckahoe Orthopaedics, said in a statement. “Being part of the enhanced care network of Bon Secours provides enhanced access to many new resources and increased efficiencies for our patients. We are looking forward to this next chapter.”
As part of the acquisition, Tuckahoe Orthopaedics’ existing practice locations in Richmond and Henrico and Hanover counties will not change.
Inova Health System is adding a Critical Illness Recovery Hospital (CIRH), also known as a long-term acute care facility, at InovaMount Vernon Hospital in Alexandria.
The service is for patients who require an extended stay with specialized clinical attention and support but no longer need the intensive care provided in an acute care hospital. It will care for patients with complex medical conditions such as heart failure, wound or burn care, severe brain injuries, respiratory therapy or ventilator weaning. The new program will be staffed by a physician-led specialty care team.
“The absence of this type of care in our region has previously required patients to be transferred to facilities in Charlottesville, Richmond, or DC — far away from their families,” Inova President and CEO Dr. J. Stephen Jones said in a statement. “With the addition of the CIRH at IMVH, all five Inova hospitals will be able to confidently transition patients to an Inova facility closer to home for this expert care.”
The Inova Mount Vernon CIRH is part of Inova’s ongoing efforts to fully build out its health care delivery system and will expand Inova’s system of services in the growing eastern region of Northern Virginia, which includes the city of Alexandria and surrounding communities, including Mount Vernon, Lorton, Franconia and Springfield.
The new hospital will be built within the current footprint of IMVH and is expected to be fully operational in late 2022.
Fairfax County-based online custom apparel company CustomInk LLC announced Monday that it had acquired New York City-based Swag.com, a platform for corporate swag and gifting.
Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
“With Swag.com, we’ll help organizers and organizations meet the really important need of sustaining a sense of connection and community no matter where people are located,” Custom Ink co-founder and CEO Marc Katz said in a statement.
The acquisition of the online design and ordering company will position Custom Ink to grow in the expanding $100 billion corporate gifting market. Swag.com was No. 368 on Inc. 5000, Inc. magazine’s 2021 list of the fastest-growing private companies in the U.S. The company’s 5,000 customers include Amazon.com Inc., Coca-Cola Co., Meta Platforms Inc. — previously Facebook — Google, Walmart Inc., TikTok and other giants.
Jeremy Parker, now Swag.com CEO, and Josh Orbach, its chief operating officer, founded the platform in 2016 as students at Boston University. The duo will continue to lead Swag.com.
“In an increasing virtual world, physical items play a tangible role in connecting people, building relationships, and showing generosity,” Orbach said in a statement. “Swag.com and Custom Ink were both built on the power of using swag to bring people together, and we believe this combination will position us for long term leadership in our category.”
Custom Ink has operating facilities in Charlottesville, Dallas and Los Angeles as well as in Reno, Nevada. The company also has stores in Alexandria, Leesburg, Reston and Richmond.
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