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Return to Virginia Business - October 2002

The Roanoke Valley Plans for the Future

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The Roanoke Valley Plans for the Future

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Roanoke Valley

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Residents of the Roanoke Valley have always enjoyed a good view of the mountains, but lately they’ve been enjoying another view: that of the future. Western Virginia’s largest metro area is a community on the move. From new housing options and outdoor dining in an already vibrant downtown to cutting-edge training initiatives to an action plan for transforming the region’s economy, the Valley is moving forward.

Providing a road map on that journey is the new Regional Economic Strategy, a product of the Fifth Planning District Regional Alliance that was a year in the making. The Alliance, made up of representatives from the public and private sectors, funds economic development projects in the region through the state’s Regional Competitiveness Act. In the course of that activity, says Chair Beth Doughty, the group became convinced that while the many development organizations in the area were doing a good job, they lacked the synergy to achieve even more.

The result is an action plan built around the concept of linking the region’s knowledge assets – such as Virginia Tech – with its urban metro assets, according to Doughty. The plan has six themes: connectivity, visibility, innovation & entrepreneurship, knowledge work force, economic transfer and quality of life amenities. And, each theme has a strategy, goal and tactics, complete with suggested participating organizations. Doughty acknowledges that some of the tactics will be easy to achieve and short-term; others may take a very long time. But in the end, she and the alliance hope the plan will supply the focus and synergy that have been missing, and “We’ll get more bang from our buck.”

One of the region’s strongest assets is downtown Roanoke. Long a hub for commerce, business and entertainment, the 65-block area now can add housing and education to its list of attributes. In fact, David Diaz, Downtown Roanoke Inc.’s president, believes it is headed toward becoming a “24-hour downtown.” As proof, he cites the increase in downtown housing, outdoor dining and plans to move the weekly Easter Seals concert series to a downtown park next summer.

For the better part of a decade, urban pioneers have been moving downtown into spaces above storefronts and restaurants, but with the opening of Eight North Jefferson, an 87-unit apartment building that once housed Norfolk & Western Railway offices, another 100 residents could be added in a short period of time. That means, says Diaz, more people eating at restaurants, using services and adding to foot traffic. An outdoor dining initiative, begun this summer, also is likely to bring more people downtown – and keep them there after work, as will the weekly concert series which moves from a suburban office park to downtown’s Elm Park next summer.

Next door to Eight North Jefferson, in another railroad facility, is the Roanoke Higher Education Center, where 16 institutions of learning — everything from a charter high school (Blue Ridge Technical Academy) to training programs and bachelor’s and master’s degree level programs — coexist in a restored art deco headquarters building. It is from there that local business and education officials plan to ensure a plentiful supply of employees for the emerging biotechnology and biomedical fields.

Dr. Mark Emick, Virginia Western Community College’s vice president for work force development services/lifelong learning, has a three-inch high stack of papers on his desk – feedback from two industry forums where representatives from the business, medical and development communities met to provide input into a new training program. The VWCC Biotechnology/Biomedical Training & Education Initiative will be unique among such programs nationwide because it will provide training for both disciplines in adjoining lab space, says Emick.

Virginia Western is equipping the biology lab used by the Blue Ridge Technical Academy (VWCC and the academy both are tenants in the Higher Ed Center) with state-of-the-art equipment for the biotechnology portion of the program and is outfitting an adjacent room for the biomedical training. Two separate facilities are needed, Emick explains, because the former is focused more on lab work, while the latter has a highly skilled manufacturing component. The new program, portions of which will be offered as early as January, needs to be both adaptable and available, he said. “We have to keep it flexible. It can’t be locked into traditional program constraints.”

With that in mind, the program is being developed with three “opportunity tiers:” dual enrollment for high school junior and seniors, technical training for under- or unemployed people or those working in the field who want to enhance their skills and a course of study for students pursuing an associate’s degree with a view toward transferring to a four-year institution.

The Roanoke Valley is a natural location for this program, Emick says, because it is a regional medical center and it is becoming a technology center.

Biotechnology and Information Technology are two of the target industries the region hopes to attract. The Roanoke Valley Economic development Partnership also markets the Valley – a 1,866-square-mile, seven-government region – to automotive/transportation-related companies and high-end, value-added manufacturers. The downtown business center is just 45 minutes from the research capabilities and global reputation of Virginia Tech, and the area has long been home to such well-known industry giants as General Electric and ITT Night Vision, and has attracted other large projects such as R.R. Donnelley & Sons, Johnson & Johnson, Maple Leaf Bakery and Trinity Packaging.

The past 10 years have seen the start of a growing automotive cluster. Virginia Tech is a source for both qualified engineering graduates and cutting-edge research, thanks to its Center for Transportation Excellence and Smart Road (a 2.2-mile, state-of-the-art, full-scale research facility for pavement research and evaluation of intelligent transportation systems concepts, technologies and products). Transportation companies that now call the Valley home include Metalsa Roanoke, Dynax America, Virginia Forge, Koyo Steering Systems of USA and Altec Industries.

Traditional and emerging-technology companies are attracted to the region by the same advantages that have always brought companies to the Roanoke Valley, including a stable economy, skilled work force and low costs of living and doing business. Known as a transportation center for most of its history, the region has developed a diverse economic base that includes health care, automotive components, information technology and biotechnology, as well as a strong service, retail and financial sectors.

Virginia Tech also is key to the area’s efforts to not only attract automotive companies firms but also biotechnology/biomedical and information technology firms, says Phillip F. Sparks, executive director of the Roanoke Valley Economic Development Partnership. Toward that end, he and his counterpart at the New River Valley Economic Development Alliance, Philippe Chino, took steps earlier this year to forge a stronger relationship between the two organizations. A joint resolution from the two boards of directors recognizes that the valleys share an economy, an interstate and Virginia Tech, and pledges the two to cooperative marketing efforts.

Beyond the resources of Virginia Tech, the Roanoke Valley offers 19 colleges and universities within a 60-mile radius – including Hollins University, Radford University, Roanoke College, Virginia Western Community College and Ferrum College – six public school systems and state-of-the-art training facilities as a ready source for trained and educated workers. Combine those with the resources of the Roanoke Higher Education Center, the Education & Training Center at Greenfield – a cooperative venture among Virginia Western Community College, Dabney Lancaster Community College and Botetourt County located in the Botetourt Center a Greenfield business park – and the Franklin County Workforce Development Consortium – which includes Ferrum College, Patrick Henry Community College, Virginia Western Community College and local service delivery agencies in a one-stop facility aimed at education and training for citizens and employers – and training opportunities are plentiful. The Valley’s six public school systems offer award-winning features that include magnet schools and two International Baccalaureate programs.

“With work underway now on the regional strategy, with a close working relationship with Virginia Tech, and the fact that the governments of the Roanoke Valley have been making a commitment to economic development, the Roanoke Valley is poised for success,” says Sparks. “People are taking notice of us. After all, Elton John has even been here twice.”

Return to Virginia Business -October 2002


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