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Corporate projects lead construction boom
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by Lisa Antonelli Bacon
for
Virginia Business
October 2005 Corporate expansions are boosting Virginia's construction
industry. From a huge marine terminal in Portsmouth to
a new beer brewery in Elkton, the investments are keeping
builders busy. Statewide, officials expect growth of
3.5 percent in commercial construction this year while
construction employment of nearly a quarter of a million
Virginians is at an all-time high.
Besides new additions to plants and facilities, a renewed
interested in downtowns has sparked big projects. Throw
in continued work on major highways and tourism-related
ventures such as the new Virginia Beach Convention Center
(with many tourism projects rushing to finish before
the 2007 celebration of the 400th anniversary of Jamestown),
and it's easy to see why the industry is booming. Balancing
the bluster of the boom, though, are rising
prices for construction materials. Prices are expected to tick up
even more with demand for many materials sky high as
a result of the damage from Hurricane Katrina.
Despite these challenges, new
buildings are taking shape across the commonwealth.
APM Terminals is spending $450
million on the country's first private container terminal
along the banks of the Elizabeth River, a coup for Hampton
Roads, because the additional berth space is expected
to draw more port business. "We are on schedule
for opening the terminal in fall 2007," says Griffith
Lynch, general manager of APM Terminals North America
in Norfolk, a unit of Denmark-based Maersk Inc. "The
new facility will feature more than 4,000 feet of berth
space … and many state-of-the-art options that
will make us the most efficient terminal in Hampton Roads."
Large, multiuse communities account
for a chunk of the construction under way. The increased
popularity of New
Urbanism — livable, sustainable communities where
residents can live work and play — is feeding new
projects in downtown Richmond and in Hampton Roads. Heralded
by some as the most important planning movement of this
century, New Urbanism is retooling neighborhoods into
small cities, offering basic necessities and residential,
retail, office and entertainment venues in a village
setting. For example, Rocketts Landing in Richmond, a
$250 million development along the James River, drew
hundreds of calls before the sales office officially
opened its doors on Labor Day. The multiuse village will
have 45 acres of office, residential and retail space.
In Newport News, the Power Plant,
another mixed-use development, got off to a slow start.
However, it's wrapping
up construction and occupancy is reaching capacity. Developer
David Cordish says that there are still a couple of "blockbuster
additions" in the works for the $129 million retail/entertainment
complex. Other long-term projects — such as the
10-year, $256 million rebuilding of the Pentagon — continue.
And already on the drawing board for next year is a $140
million project for Wythe County. PepsiCo Inc. will build
a new manufacturing and distribution facility in the
county's Progress Park.
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