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Features

Rising to the Challenge

Consumer demand patterns are shifting rapidly, affecting shipping requirements, order cycle times, retail formats and service level requirements. Rising fuel and utilities costs, burdensome regulations, changes in tax laws and sustainability requirements, labor supply and union issues, municipal and state economic incentives and so many other cost considerations are volatile and challenging today.

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International Update

Innovation to Spare

Can a nation be stable and dynamic at the same time? The answer from Canada is a distinct “Yes.” A look at the corporate projects unfolding across the nation reveals both Canadian stability and Canadian outreach.

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Features

The Power of People

The Top Utilities of 2012 transmit positive energy and connect better than most. Utilities today grapple with such thorny issues as EPA regulations, data center demand, customer demands for renewables and lower costs, the on again/off again comeback of nuclear power, catching up with infrastructure investment, and increasing power demand from increasingly populous territories.

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Cover

Solidifying Seattle

Two massive projects target the city’s vulnerability to earthquakes. The 1950s-era viaduct was showing signs of age and deterioration before the 2001 earthquake further weakened the structure, but the earthquake heightened the need for its replacement. corporate real estate, economic development

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Energy Report

Learning By Doing

Next month, on Sept. 29, the the Center for Green Schools at the U.S. Green Building Council will lead the first ever Green Apple Day of Service, which will call on green building professionals and volunteers from across the country and internationally to participate in a service project to green a school or campus in their community.

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Energy Report

I Am the Slime

Algae are so simple they don’t even technically qualify as plants. But if a bipartisan U.S. Senate committee recommendation moves forward, algae-derived biofuels can now stand tall next to their biofuels counterparts in qualifying for tax credits.

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Energy Report

Life In the Pay Zone

To find people in North Dakota connected to the boom in the state’s oil patch, just stand still at an airport and they’ll walk by. That is, if they were able to find a parking space.

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Area Spotlights

Missouri to Asia Is a Two-way Street

A St. Louis manufacturer explains the importance of Asia to his export business. Missouri ties Tennessee among the 50 states for sharing borders with the most states, with eight. But Missouri emerged as the clear leader in jobs created over its eight neighbors during the first quarter of 2012 with 27,500, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Helping drive this job creation are record-setting exports and reshoring in some manufacturing sectors.

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Area Spotlights

Tunnel Vision

Rail initiatives permit double-stack trains east-west and north-south. Virginia, the railroads and private businesses all benefit. Tunnels were re-shaped in some cases, tracks lowered or realigned in others. Norfolk Southern Corp.’s aim was the same: to permit double-stack intermodal trains to pass through mountain tunnels where necessary along the length of its Heartland Corridor rail route, which runs from the Port of Virginia to Chicago.

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Features

Big Tent

When PharmaCline CEO Steve Keough needed a location to develop and commercialize his promising new pharmaceutical technology, he analyzed all 50 states. “When I arrived in South Dakota I was immediately embraced,” said Keough, who recalls how he met with the governor’s office, the South Dakota Biotech Association and venture captiatlist in his first day in the state.

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Life Sciences

Research Project

A little more than three years ago, the University of Michigan completed its $108 million acquisition of the former Pfizer campus in Ann Arbor and re-named the site the University of Michigan North Campus Research Complex. University officials estimated then that at least 2,000 jobs would be created over the next decade at the 174-acre site that encompasses nearly 2 million sq. ft. (185,800 sq. m.) of lab and office space in 28 buildings.

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Life Sciences

Shire Plans San Diego Campus

Multinational biopharmaceutical company Shire plans a major new campus in San Diego for its Shire Regenerative Medicine division, formerly known as Advanced BioHealing. Shire has signed a lease agreement with BioMed Realty Trust, a REIT that specializes in the life sciences industry.

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Online Insider

Fresh Start

by Adam Bruns

This week marks the seventh anniversary of Hurricane Katrina striking New Orleans. This summer marks a milestone in one company’s comeback from that storm’s devastation. MECO Inc., founded more than 80 years ago in New Orleans as Mechanical Equipment Co., announced in June that it would invest $11 million to construct a new 80,000-sq.-ft. facility at the Alamosa Business Park in Mandeville, St. Tammany Parish, La., that would create 127 new direct jobs, retain 81 existing jobs and result in 168 new indirect jobs.

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Area Spotlights

Pulp Nonfiction

Louisiana has added more than two dozen facility locations in the forestry, wood, pulp and paper products and biomass sectors over the past two years.

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Area Spotlights

More Than a Hobby

Growing a corporate presence means tapping into a culture in Oklahoma. The model that Hobby Lobby has used successfully for many years in retail site selection is now being employed at its corporate headquarters in Oklahoma City.

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Area Spotlights

Industrial Redux

West Virginia offered the right mix to land, Gestamp, a major automotive project for an idled plant in South Charleston.

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World Reports

Carbon in Norway; Logistics Projects; Automotive in China, Apollo Tyres

The world’s largest facility for testing and developing carbon capture technologies was inaugurated in Mongstad, Norway, in early May. Technology Centre Mongstad (TCM) is a joint venture between the government of Norway, Statoil, Shell and Sasol.

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Area Spotlights

Green Growth

Garden State projects focus on sustainability and clean technologies. BASF’s new headquarters in Florham Park, N.J., just west of Newark, was built as a model for sustainability.

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Area Spotlights

In the Thick of Things

Arkansas is surrounded by some business-friendly powerhouses. So it must try harder. And it’s doing just that, says a state business association executive. Bill Hannah is Chairman of Associated Industries of Arkansas (AIA), an association of Arkansas businesses that works with the Arkansas State Chamber of Commerce and other organizations to foster a business environment in which companies can compete and succeed. He is also CEO of Nabholz Construction Services, based in Conway, Ark., which was founded in 1949.

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International Update

Why Somaliland Is Different

Somaliland has a challenge. Many in the world do not know where it is. Many that do know where it is associate it with marine piracy and lawlessness. Those people who do know where it is probably come from countries that do not recognize it. But with Coca-Cola opening a plant and the potential of a new Free Zone then maybe the good times are returning.

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International Update

Cambodia: an Unpolished Gem

Cambodia has come from the rough: its recent history is scarred by the Khmer Rouge era of the late 1970’s where the genocide of over 2 million persons remains one of the worst historical examples of man’s inhumanity to man.

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Features

Mobile Momentum

More analysis, cloud computing and smarter buildings are among industry trends. Mobility of corporate real estate technology is a top priority these days as software developers rush to meet demand. Industry observers say there is still reluctance by corporate IT types to embrace the technology, but it will be widely deployed within a few years.

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Area Spotlights

Setting the Hook

A leading reason companies locate where they do is proximity to their customers. That’s well documented, and it’s why Osprey Backpacks, Sitka Gear, LMS Defense, Quality Bicycle Products and LUCID (shooting accessories) all have sited new facilities in the Rocky Mountain region recently.Rocky Mountain Region:

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North American Reports

Gotta Start Somewhere; Full Speed Ahead in Halifax; Travel and Trade; Big Business in the Bluegrass; Eduring Attractions

by Adam Bruns

North American Reports: Gotta Strat Somewhere; Full Speed Ahead in Halifax; Travel and Trade; Big Business in the Bluegrass; Eduring Attractions | Site Selection Online

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