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Virginia Business
September 2006 Norfolk cruise terminal to open next year
Construction of a new $37 million cruise terminal in
downtown Norfolk, adjacent to the Nauticus National
Maritime Center, is on schedule, with the terminal
scheduled to open in March. The terminal will be called
the Half Moone Cruise and Celebration Center, named
for a fort erected on the site in 1673. Built in the
shape of a half moon, it protected the region’s
emerging maritime industry. The 80,000-square-foot
terminal will offer 33,000 square feet of space for
events. At the entrance in its floor tile with be a
54-foot image of a mermaid — one of Norfolk’s
most popular symbols. Departing cruise guests will
be able to access destinations such as Bermuda, the
Bahamas and the Caribbean from the new facility.
New system at port monitors containers
The Virginia Port Authority is the first port in the
country to install a system that allows monitoring
of in-bound cargo containers. It’s capable of
detecting evidence of content tampering, such as container
doors that may have been opened in transit or unexpected
temperature changes. The systems involves radio frequency
transmitters inside the cargo container, and corresponding
receivers, which are installed at the gates of the
Virginia Port Authority's three marine terminals in
Norfolk, Portsmouth and Newport News. The monitoring
system is manufactured by CommerceGuard, a joint venture
of General Electric, Mitsubishi and Siemens.
Senate authorizes money for Craney Island expansion
In July, the U.S. Senate appropriated $671.3 million
for the 580-acre eastward expansion of the Craney Island
Dredged Material Management Area, laying the groundwork
for the eventual construction of a fourth marine cargo
terminal for the Virginia Port Authority. The allocation
was part of the Water Resources Development Act. The
House of Representatives, however, did not include
the expansion money in its version of the water act.
The House and Senate are expected to resolve their
differences over the act by the end of September. The
island, sitting just north of Portsmouth, is a repository
for dredged material from the river bottom. Additional
federal money — as much as $26.2 million — needs
to be appropriated for the project and is expected
to come in separate legislation. The rest of the cost
will be covered by the port authority.
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