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Greater
Richmond - East Coast Technology Center
 
Richmond
has twice been named the Top Major Market
in the South by Southern Business & Development.
Pictured is Greater Richmond's economic development team.
Greater
Richmond Partnership, Inc. is the regional public-private
economic development team that serves the City of Richmond
and the counties of Chesterfield, Hanover and Henrico. It
was launched in 1994 and is funded by the four jurisdictions
and by more than 300 businesses.
Ranked
as one of the top economic development groups in the nation
for the past five years, the Partnership has led Greater Richmond
into the new economy.
An early
achievement was the attraction of the region's first semiconductor-manufacturing
complex, a joint venture of Siemens and Motorola. Opened in
1996 and operated today by Infineon Technologies Richmond,
the complex has received "Top Fab of the Year" honors
and has established itself as a world-class manufacturer of
memory devices for personal and notebook computers, work stations,
servers and communications applications.
The complex
is now undergoing a major expansion to outfit a new module
with 300mm equipment. At full buildout, the expansion is expected
to create more than 1,100 jobs, bringing total employment
to approximately 2,800 people.
The new
jobs are part of an all-time record 10,000 new jobs announced
for Greater Richmond during the first quarter of 2000. The
announcements involve a near record $1.8 billion in new investment
for Greater Richmond.
A major
portion of this increase came from 7,000 new jobs announced
by Capital One. The company's expansion program, including
a new 1.5-million-square-foot operations complex, is the largest
in the history of Virginia. Capital One's rapid growth in
Greater Richmond has made it the region's largest private-sector
employer, surpassing Philip Morris, which held the title for
many years.
Greater
Richmond, long known as a corporate headquarters center, today
also is the home of the fast-growing Virginia BioTechnology
Research Park and has seen a series of expansions by high-tech
companies, including Hewlett-Packard's LaserJet printer assembly
and distribution centers. The center city is alive with investment
and construction, including a new convention center, new high-end
housing, a new Canal Walk and riverfront development, new
buildings of Virginia Commonwealth University, and a new intermodal
transportation center. The transportation center will be a
crossroads for high-speed rail service being planned to link
Washington, D.C. and the Northeast Corridor with rail lines
in eastern Virginia and points south.
Greater
Richmond's population has grown to 996,512 -- nearly 1 million
-- according to recently released U.S. Census Bureau figures.
This is a 15 percent increase from 1990.
The Partnership's
current five-year plan calls for recruiting a new semiconductor
fabrication plant, assistance in the relocation of 200 new
corporations including 40 foreign-owned firms, creation of
50,000 new jobs, attraction of $2 billion in new investment,
assistance in the expansion of 400 area businesses, and the
counseling and training of 2,000 small businesses and 7,500
small-business owners and executives.
The Greater
Richmond Partnership's staff, headed by Gregory H. Wingfield,
president, provides a full range of economic development and
site-selection services free of charge. Information and assistance
can be obtained by calling 1-800-229-6332 or by visiting the
Partnership's Website http://www.grpva.com.
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