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News & Features

Philip Morris’ center is a big boost for downtown Richmond

by Otesa Middleton Miles
for Virginia Business
October 2006

It’s the kind of project every city wants: a big, showy $350 million research center in the heart of downtown. As the seven-story Philip Morris USA Center for Research & Technology rises from two city blocks, it gives Richmond a visible symbol of downtown’s ongoing rebirth.

“ The impact is beyond measure,” says Garland Williams, interim director of economic development for Richmond. “It symbolizes a rebirth of industry coming back to the city.”

A longtime capital city inhabitant and once its largest private employer, Philip Morris can now claim one of the largest private investments in Richmond’s history. Located in the Virginia Biotechnology Research Park, the 450,000-square-foot structure should be complete by next year. It will house more than 500 scientists, engineers and support staff.

So far, construction is about halfway done. Hundreds of construction workers have removed 16,000 truckloads of dirt and hauled in 90,000 square feet of glass for the structure that sprawls between Fifth and Seventh streets.

 

Workers hired for the new high-tech jobs will research new products for the country’s No. 1 cigarette maker and explore ways to reduce the risk of smoking, says Philip Morris spokesman Bill Phelps.

Besides providing space for modern laboratories and research, the center will offer amenities such as a fitness center, library and on-site cafeteria.

Designed by New Jersey-based architects CUH2A and built by Richmond’s Hourigan Construction Corp., the center will have 40 miles of piping, 550 miles of wiring and 24,000 cubic yards of concrete.

The center’s location provides a welcome boost to the biotechnology park’s stature and visibility, by nearly doubling its space. Downtown Richmond got the nod for the building because of its proximity to the Life Sciences Program at Virginia Commonwealth University and its medical college. Richmond donated the land, and Virginia threw in about $15 million in state incentive money.

Philip Morris is now recruiting globally for scientists and researchers who will receive “generous compensation packages, well above the city’s prevailing wage,” says Phelps. Williams hopes the new hires will go beyond working downtown, to dining, shopping and living there, joining a growing residential population that is snapping up the area’s new luxury high-rise condos.

With what could be any city’s mantra, Williams sums up the bustling crews that are turning a former parking lot into a state-of-the-art research center: “When you see cranes in the air—it’s always a good sign.”


Project: Philip Morris USA Center for Research & Technology
Owner/developer: Philip Morris USA
Cost: $350 million
Architect: CUH2A
General contractor: Hourigan Construction Corp.

 


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