Return to Virginia Business - November 2002

Virginia Tech, U.Va. proposal prevails for aerospace institute

A new national aerospace-research institute is a good news/bad news proposition for Hampton Roads.

Langley Research Center of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration is helping finance the start-up of the National Institute for Aerospace (NIA) near its Hampton headquarters. With a potential to attract nearly $400 million in research contracts during the next 20 years, NASA Langley officials hope NIA will help boost the region’s sagging per-capita wage and stimulate economic development.

That’s the good news. The bad news? Despite being geographically near NASA Langley, Old Dominion University and Hampton University are light years away from meeting NASA’s needs for the new educational/research initiative. That was evident when Langley, after nearly a year-long search, awarded a contract to run the aerospace complex to a consortium spearheaded by Virginia Tech and the University of Virginia. A proposal championed by ODU and HU was among a half dozen other competing bids.

That Tech-U.Va. got the nod was almost a fait accomplit. Some Hampton Roads business leaders worried the ODU-HU proposal lacked the cachet that Langley was seeking, despite some apparent advantages. HU last year earned research contracts from Langley worth $4.5 million – the most in Virginia and third-most in the nation. ODU was second among Virginia schools with $2.3 million in captured Langley research.

So what put the Tech-U.Va. bid over the top? Charles Harris, a director with NASA Langley, said it was “fundamentally sound in every respect and a superior proposal,” but declined to elaborate.
Still, it could have been worse. NASA Langley could have awarded the bid to an out-of-state consortium, which would have meant that $3 million to $4 million in annual ongoing research awards would have been spirited to other regions of the country. And officials with the Tech-U.Va. consortium have indicated they want HU, which is the only state school offering a degree concentration in atmospheric sciences, to participate in shaping the educational component of NIA.

— Garry Kranz

Return to Virginia Business - November 2002