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Harrisonburg goes high tech

by Heather B. Hayes
Virginia Business

March 2005

What started as a student research project at James Madison University to revitalize Harrisonburg’s downtown may end up cultivating a new kind of economy for the region. The idea? Create a rural downtown technology zone. Impressed, city officials recently set aside $2 million and rezoned two downtown blocks for the initiative — known as the Harrisonburg Downtown Technology Zone (HDTZ) — which will include information technology companies, support businesses, condominiums, restaurants and museums, as well as a 22,000-square-foot innovation center.

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The Harrisonburg Innovation Center, the first project approved within the new zone, will be located in a former department store and is now being renovated for a January 2006 opening. Officials are actively recruiting what they hope will be eight to 15 tenants. All must be semi-mature to mature firms that, initially, specialize in Radio Frequency Identification and data warehousing technologies.

“We are putting together a highly innovative networking environment where everyone works together in a synergistic way for common success,” explains Jim Barnes, Harrisonburg’s assistant economic development director for technology. “So initially, we will try to get a cluster of companies working in a different phase of those two technologies, so that we can utilize the expertise across them and better position ourselves for grants and contracts, either from the federal government or large companies.”

Eventually, as tenants move out into the zone and other parts of Harrisonburg, the center will focus on bringing in new companies that specialize in other technologies, including informatics, homeland security and defense, virtual technologies and Web development. The companies themselves will have to apply and pass muster based on their likelihood of success and how well they mesh with other center or zone tenants.

In return, Barnes says, entrepreneurs will gain several benefits: inclusion in HDTZ marketing efforts, access to information on contracts and grants, a cutting-edge infrastructure, business assistance resources and onsite help with budget and forecasting strategies and finding new investors. Tenants will also have an open door to JMU faculty and student interns.

Return to Virginia Business - March 2005