|
A four-leaf clover?
Fort Lee's expansion is good
news for Petersburg
READER
RESOURCES |
Web
Pointers: For more information
|
|
|
|
by Donna
C. Gregory
for Virginia Business
February 2007
Call it a stroke of good luck. While other cities
worry about military base closings, the army base next
door to Petersburg will double in population over the
next few years, bringing growth to a city that needs
an economic jolt.
When an additional 8,200 military workers, civilians,
contractors and students start arriving at Fort Lee's
logistics center during the next four years, the 5,500-acre
complex in Prince George County will become the country's
second largest training installation. That means more
houses, more schools and more retail will be needed
to accommodate the influx.
Petersburg is gearing up for the growth - an unexpected
pot of gold for a city ranked as the fifth most fiscally
distressed in 2005, based on a state report that looked
at comparative revenues from 1998-2003. While Petersburg's
Old Towne area has experienced a renaissance - with
new artsy businesses and restaurants moving in - high
property tax rates and poor performance by city schools
on the state's Standards of Learning (SOL) tests are
challenges for corporate recruitment.
In fact, Fort Lee's expansion is expected to boost
the entire Gateway Region, an area with a population
of 433,000 that, besides Petersburg, includes the cities
of Hopewell and Colonial Heights and the counties of
Surry, Sussex, Prince George, Dinwiddie and southern
Chesterfield.
The expansion in facility space - from 7.5 million
square feet to 13 million square feet by 2011 (within
the base's current boundaries) - is part of a military
realignment recommended by the Defense Department's
Base Realignment and Closure Commission (BRAC) that
won Congressional approval in 2005. As the base adds
labs, a simulation center, and more teaching and administrative
space, the project is expected to generate $1.3 billion
in construction on Fort Lee alone.
The expansion is already generating
interest among private contractors, says Renee Wyatt-Chapline,
executive director of Virginia's Gateway Region,
an economic development organization. "You're going to have
many suppliers and vendors find that logistically they
need to be close to the base," says Wyatt-Chapline. "We're
actually hosting meetings for many of the contractors
that are interested in locating to the area as a result
of BRAC." So far, she's heard from engineering
and food- service firms as well as service industries.
FORT
LEE WORK FORCE SURVEY |
Where
do they live?
Fort Lee 17.0%
Petersburg 10.2
Hopewell 6.7
Colonial Heights 8.3
Prince George County 15.2
Dinwiddie County 5.7
Chesterfield County 26.5
Other 10.8 |
Meanwhile, local real estate
agents are seeing increased interest. "We've had a lot of activity already," says
John Powell, supervising broker and vice president
of Long & Foster Realtors' Southpark office in
Colonial Heights. "There are some people who
are buying houses as investments for rentals. There
are some people who have been speculating on land,
and there's a lot of commercial growth," notes
Powell. "I think we're going to see more restaurants,
more shops. We're going to have a full spectrum of
growth all around."
Growth brings challenges
The growth will challenge existing resources. A bigger
population at Fort Lee is expected to strain local
school systems - some of which are already crowded
- and cause a demand for affordable housing that
doesn't presently exist. "We will be getting
involved at a detailed level with our surrounding
school systems and also with the development community
on the school and housing issues," says Denny
Morris, executive director of the Crater Planning
District Commission.
Fort Lee is the region's major
economic engine, pumping about $900 million into
the regional economy and generating $60 million in
state and local tax revenues, says Morris. "[With
the expansion,] it will certainly jump up significantly
in terms of its economic impact" - with some estimates
doubling the economic impact.
When completed in 2011, what
will be known as the Sustainment Center of Excellence
at Fort Lee will merge several training facilities
into one location, including the U.S. Army Ordnance
Mechanical Maintenance School from Aberdeen, Md.,
the Transportation Center & School
from Fort Eustis, Va., and the Air Force Transportation
Training and Air Force Culinary Training from Lackland
Air Force Base in Texas.
The result will bump Fort Lee's average daily population
from about 16,273 to 31,373. Most of the new faces
will be students, based at Fort Lee temporarily as
they receive training. But permanent military and civilian
personnel and outside contractors will be needed to
operate the center, with the first wave of new personnel
coming in 2009.
That gives the region just
two years to put in place the services and infrastructure
needed to support the newcomers and their families. "We've been working
very closely with the communities to identify the impact
and at the same time, we're working to expand our facilities
here," says Esther Lee, Fort Lee's deputy garrison
commander.
In the meantime, a local team of consultants is studying
housing, transportation, child care, schools, employment
and other crucial areas in an effort to predict what
will be needed to successfully absorb the incoming
Fort Lee personnel. On the school front, places will
need to be found for an estimated additional 3,600
pupils.
Tentative predictions on regional impact are based
on the lifestyles of current Fort Lee personnel. A
recent survey revealed that 26.5 percent of the base's
personnel reside in Chesterfield County with another
17 percent living on base and 15.2 percent making their
home in Prince George County.
That trend is expected to continue.
Jim Adkins, president of the Home Builders Association
of Southside Virginia, points out that the counties
surrounding Petersburg have many more lots. "Colonial Heights and Petersburg
just don't have much developable land," he says.
Affordable housing
However, when it comes to prices, Petersburg's housing
should appeal to buyers in search of affordable homes.
The area's average home prices are lower than what
can be found 30 minutes away in metropolitan Richmond. "We
have a lot more affordable homes available than a
lot of our surrounding areas, which makes it good
for Fort Lee," says Powell.
The average price for a home in the Gateway Region
in November was $208,174 - up from $172,950 during
that same month in 2005 - but more than $80,000 less
than the state average of $288,716.
But Petersburg's low-performing
schools could put off families in search of housing. "Petersburg
won't be impacted as much as Chesterfield, Prince George,
Hopewell, Colonial Heights and even Dinwiddie," predicts
Brian Glass, senior vice president of retail brokerage
with Grubb & Ellis|Harrison & Bates in Richmond.
Petersburg is working to improve its public schools,
says Vandy Jones, manager of Petersburg's office of
economic development. Last October, the Virginia Department
of Education tapped former Prince George County Superintendent
Dorothea M. Shannon to help the city meet state accreditation
standards. Currently, only one of the city's nine public
schools is fully accredited. Four have been denied
accreditation due to low SOL scores.
On the brighter side, a new hospital - Southside Regional
Medical Center - is going up. Plus, Boehringer Ingelheim
Chemicals, one of Petersburg's largest employers, continues
to expand its chemical manufacturing plant. In October,
it broke ground on new production and laboratory facilities
that will increase its manufacturing capacity by 50
percent and create more than 100 new jobs.
School placements won't be an issue for people relocating
to Fort Lee without children. This group, which includes
empty-nesters and young professionals, may gravitate
to Petersburg's growing downtown arts community.
Robin Miller, of Monroe Properties, hopes so. When
the Shockoe Bottom Arts Center, now known as the Petersburg
Regional Art Center, relocated to downtown Petersburg
in 2003, developers began looking at downtown Petersburg's
empty storefronts with artists' eyes and saw potential.
Miller, one of the first developers there, is working
on the second phase of High Street Lofts in the former
Seward Luggage Building. When complete, the project
will offer 68 condominiums featuring the exposed brick,
timbers and pressed tin ceilings from the original
building.
Condominium projects by other
developers are under way on South and Bank streets,
creating a blossoming residential community that's
feeding the opening of café-style restaurants
and small niche shops.
"If you have people living in downtown, it creates
demand for retail and services. And if you have retail,
services and activities, it will draw more people downtown.
You hope they will continue to build on each other," says
Jones.
Miller is optimistic - especially
now that Fort Lee is expanding. "I believe the [Fort Lee] expansion
will result in a huge demand for housing in the area," he
says. "The wealth of historic architecture at
low prices is very appealing, especially to the 'baby
boomer' generation. People are finally discovering
Petersburg."
|