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Newport News
Science and technology hub offers
an outstanding quality of life
A strong research and technology base, enviable quality
of life, high productivity and moderate costs add up
to value for companies locating in Newport News. Information
and technology-driven firms find a highly educated workforce
and access to advanced scientific and technological
research. Firms in the office sector find an exceptional
quality of life for their executives and access to a
1.6 million person metropolitan area. Manufacturers
find a positive business environment, low operating
costs and an aggressive Economic Development Authority
(NNEDA).
Location
Newport News, a vibrant city of more than 185,000, is
at the mid-point of the Atlantic Coast and at the center
of the Hampton Roads area. Newport News is served by
interstate highways, rail, the Port of Hampton Roads
and three commercial airports. More than 20 international
firms have located in the City, including Siemens Automotive,
Canon, Muller Martini, Wolseley North America/Ferguson
Enterprises and Icelandic USA.
Technology
Two national laboratories, Jefferson Lab and NASA’s
Langley Research Center, give the city an impressive
technological base. The NNEDA’s Applied Research
Center, a 122,000-square-foot, seven-story class-A office/laboratory
located at the Jefferson Center for Research and Technology
next to Jefferson Lab, provides a venue for synergy
to occur between scientists, university faculty and
the private sector. Research is ongoing in photonics,
nanotechnology, medical imaging, surface modification
and plasmas. On the city’s downtown waterfront,
the Herbert H. Bateman Virginia Advanced Shipbuilding
and Carrier Integration Center, which was also developed
by the NNEDA, is where engineers from Northrop Grumman
Newport News and other defense contractors team with
university researchers to design the next generation
of nuclear aircraft carriers and solve other naval systems
integration problems. Formerly Newport News Shipbuilding,
Northrop Grumman is Virginia’s largest manufacturer
and a world leader in naval, nuclear and systems technology.
The region’s work force benefits from the region’s
seven resident colleges and universities, ten branch
campuses, two law schools, a medical college and two
community colleges. Five of these institutions offer
doctoral degrees and seven more have masters programs.
Work force
Drawing from more than 800,000 workers in the metro
area, firms can find productive employees with almost
any skill or professional expertise. With a high concentration
of scientists, Newport News’ labor market is ideal
for technology driven companies. The region’s
military bases also pump skilled workers into the labor
force. Area businesses give workers high marks for availability
and performance. Wage and salary scales are below the
national average. Union influence is weak.
Quality of life
Workers and business owners are attracted to the region’s
superb lifestyle. The James River, Chesapeake Bay and
nearby Atlantic Ocean provide abundant recreation. Waterfront
homes are surprisingly affordable and executives can
choose among several golf communities. Area attractions
include Colonial Williamsburg, along with Busch Gardens
and Water Country USA. Culturally, the region is home
to the Virginia Symphony, the Virginia Opera, the Virginia
Stage Company and the Chrysler Museum of Art.
In the middle of the city are two successful new-urbanist
developments. City Center at Oyster Point is a high-density,
mixed-use urban center that is a perfect regional or
district headquarters location, with a Marriott Hotel
and Conference Center, high-end retail and a new office
building under construction. Within walking distance,
Port Warwick is an urban village built around a series
of public squares with much attention to visual design
and public art. Site work will soon begin for Asheton,
a new traditional neighborhood development on more than
400 acres in the northern part of the City.
Near City Center and Port Warwick, the expanded Virginia
Living Museum is now open, while the world-renowned
Mariners’ Museum has completed its showcase USS
Monitor Exhibit. Riverside Regional Medical Center has
also completed a multimillion dollar expansion. Christopher
Newport University continues to build on campus and
the I.M. Pei- designed Ferguson Center for the Arts
is entering its third season.
Office and industrial sites
Oyster Point of Newport News, next to Jefferson Lab
and Canon, is the region’s premier business center.
Class A office space is available at City Center, in
Oyster Point and elsewhere in the City. Oakland Industrial
Park has wooded and cleared sites, some with rail service,
and available industrial buildings of up to 40,000 square
feet. Oakland is in the City’s North Enterprise
Zone.
Savings
Incentives are available for firms that create jobs
and significantly add to the tax base. The NNEDA can
write down occupancy costs, and low-interest loans for
machinery and equipment purchases are available for
expanding companies. Newport News offers some of the
most generous local incentives in Virginia for qualifying
companies in its Enterprise Zones, and grants from the
state are available to companies that locate in any
of the city’s four enterprise zone areas.
The NNEDA is an aggressive and innovative economic
development organization. It has developed or redeveloped
1.5 million square feet of industrial and office space
for direct sale or lease to a variety of companies,
and structured both capital and operating leases. Newport
News’ approach to economic development is definitely
solution-driven. Whatever the industry, NNEDA staff
members are eager to help firms find the right existing
industrial or office building for sale or lease.
Florence G. Kingston or Ted Figura
Newport News Economic Development Authority
(800) 274-8348 or (757) 926-8428
Fax (757) 926-3504
Web site: www.newportnewsva.com
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