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FROM SITE SELECTION MAGAZINE, NOVEMBER 2023 ISSUE


EDITOR’S VIEW

Use Your Words

In his first column as Editor in Chief, Adam Bruns has some thoughts on the value of “natural” intelligence and real conversations.


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INVESTMENT PROFILE: COLUMBUS, OHIO

How the Columbus Region Became the Talent Factory of the Midwest

The secret sauce behind big wins from Intel, AWS and Honda? Workforce development.


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FROM THE ARCHIVES

In addition to ferrying more than 1 million passengers from its Hudson River berth, the SS United States was also a top-secret convertible troop transport that could rush 14,000 troops 10,000 miles without refueling.

Rendering courtesy of SS United States Conservancy

Last week the SS United States Conservancy unveiled its plan, in partnership with RXR and MCR Hotels, to bring the famous ocean liner back to New York City and repurpose it as a mixed-use destination, including a 1,000-key hotel and other public green space and amenities. “The project could be a capstone to a decades-long effort to protect and revitalize the Hudson River waterfront, create thousands of new jobs, and generate millions in tax revenue annually,” the Conservancy stated. Readers may recall the last time the ship was in peril, as contributor Dean Barber documented in a memorable May 2012 Online Insider called “Ship to Shore: A Love Story.”

Today, says the Conservancy, the ship faces possible eviction from its current pier in Philadelphia due to a doubling of the rent during the pandemic, “placing significant financial strain on the organization,” said the organization’s statement on November 2. “The Conservancy is presently in litigation on the matter, with a trial date slated for early December. The redevelopment plan identified Manhattan’s Hudson River as “the optimal ‘home port’ for the vessel,” it continued, “due to its proximity to transportation and pedestrian access to the Javits Convention Center.” However, the vision is not limited to New York. “Other locations and port cities could benefit from the ship’s commercial revitalization and iconic status,” says the Conservancy, which is now seeking state and local interest “from New York or other potential cities to advance its plan at a host pier location,” to which the nonprofit would donate the ship and the design and engineering work completed to date in order to expedite matters.

“The SS United States symbolizes the nation’s ambition and innovation,” said Susan Gibbs, president of the SS United States Conservancy, whose grandfather helped design and build the ship. "He is on record as saying that he loved the ship one thousand times more than his own wife,” she told Dean Barber in our 2012 story, and would meet it each time it docked. But even in 2012, she said, "It really is remarkable the ship has not been scrapped before now.” Eleven years later, “we are quickly running out of time,” she said last week, only this time from the extra pressure of the rent. “We know this can be a viable, transformative project. Let’s rally together to secure a home for America’s Flagship.”

 

SITE OF THE WEEK

 

Connexial Center

 

Laurens County, South Carolina, is brimming with commercial and industrial potential along nearby Interstate I-85, recently referred to as “the Main Street of the New South.” The county’s newest industrial park, the Connexial Center, is in close proximity to I-85, I-26 and I-385 industrial corridor, which provides access to the most efficient port on the East Coast as well as interstate and rail connecting to more than 100 million consumers in a day’s drive.

One of seven in Laurens County, the Connexial Center is a Class A industrial park with 615 developable acres of prime industrial property ready for investment, development, and growth. All utilities are onsite, and all due diligence has been completed, providing an efficient path for companies looking to move operations forward, faster. In addition, the current Laurens County workforce consists of over 468,000 people within a 45-minute drive time radius.

For more information, visit www.growlaurenscounty.com.

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SITE SELECTION RECOMMENDS

This photo accompanied a 2020 release from Cargill documenting its community impact across 70 countries in which it does business, including training 860,000 farmers and providing more than 39 million meals to global and local food bank partners.

Photo courtesy of Cargill

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in October released its 2023 Trade and Development Report. “While some economies, including Brazil, China, India, Japan, Mexico, Russia and the United States, have demonstrated resilience in 2023, others face more formidable challenges,” UNCTAD said in a release, noting a number of “frontier economies” have seen debt burdens increase and could tip into worse circumstances or default.

The report casts a sharp eye on the ag-food sector in particular: “In the food trading industry, patterns of profiteering reinforce the need to extend systemic financial oversight and consider corporate group behavior within the framework of the global financial architecture,” the release stated.” The graph it published, shown below, documents what it calls the profiteering of the four “ABCD” food companies amid price volatility. At the same time, Site Selection’s Conway Projects Database has documented 64 facility project investments around the world from these four companies since January 2020 totaling more than $5.8 billion in investment. The project list includes from Cargill alone a $100 million, 100-job expansion in Cote D’Ivoire; a 300-job project in Valle del Cauca, Colombia; a $5 million investment in Bursa, Turkey; and several projects in Indonesia, where the company next year will celebrate 50 years of doing business and where just yesterday it opened a new cocoa development center next to its plant in Gresik.

Graph courtesy of UNCTAD

 

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

Photo courtesy of NSF


Published to the National Science Foundation website last month, this photo made in April by Scott Crabbe shows the Nathaniel B. Palmer research vessel at Davis Station anchorage in Antarctica with an aurora borealis light show overhead. The U.S. Antarctic Program (USAP) is supported by the U.S. National Science Foundation.