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November 1, 2002

Decision Data: Where High-Growth Companies Are Born, Site Selection Magazine, November 2002

W estern states are proving to be a natural habitat for gazelles, according to some recent research — not zoological research, but rather location research from Cognetics (www.cogonline.com), a Waltham, Mass.-based consultancy.         Gazelles are rapidly growing, publicly traded companies whose revenues have grown at an average annual compound rate of 20 […]

November 1, 2002

Site Selection’s Annual State Legislative Update

S tate budgetary shortfalls have mirrored the U.S. economy at large over the past year, prompting many legislatures to adopt stringent measures to curb spending and maintain the tax base. Many held special legislative sessions in order to achieve some fiscal progress.         While some economic development branches have been streamlined, most […]

November 1, 2002

Global Business Climate: Partly Sunny

H opes were high at the beginning of the year that 2002 would see the start of a sustained economic recovery in Europe and the rest of the industrialized world. The figures for the first few months appeared to show that the optimism was well founded. The leading global economies grew at 2.4 percent in […]

November 1, 2002

Mini Mill, Major Project

D rive along the southern edge of Lake Michigan, and the steel legacy of northern Indiana becomes inescapably apparent, in both the best and worst of senses. Much of the industry’s looming gray capacity has gone dormant, but there is still a core that thrives. And where big steel has suffered, little steel is doing […]

November 1, 2002

Trying To Build Bio-Economies, Site Selection Magazine, November 2002

S tates across America are developing strategies for cloning the biotechnology industries that have emerged in California, Massachusetts, and Maryland over the past 30 years.         In the wake of the burst high technology bubble, biotech offers them the promise of renewed economic growth.         Or does it? According […]

November 1, 2002

Military Base Redevelopment: A Fighting Chance, Site Selection Magazine, November 2002

W ith a new round of U.S. military base closures on the not-too-distant horizon of 2005, more communities will be dealing with the accompanying job losses and subsequent base redevelopment. But that’s not necessarily bad news. Dozens of previously closed bases have been reinvented as centers of industry and research.         Since […]

November 1, 2002

Editor’s View: Manufacturing Is On the Move, Site Selection Magazine, November 2002

T he most likely candidate for a location decision involving a new or expanded facility will be in the manufacturing sector, according to corporate executives surveyed by Development Counsellors International (DCI), a New York?based economic development marketing firm. More than 280 corporate executives participated in the exercise.         Forty-four percent of the […]

November 1, 2002

North American Reports

From Site Selection magazine, November 2002 NORTH AMERICAN REPORTS Edited by ADAM BRUNS Lilly Growing in Puerto Rico Too NOTHING COULD BE FINER: Eli Lilly executives join with local residents and community officials to break ground on a $450-million facility in Carolina, Puerto Rico. The plant is Lilly’s third major facility announcement of 2002, with […]

November 1, 2002

World Reports, Site Selection Magazine, November 2002

From Site Selection magazine, November 2002 WORLD REPORTS edited by ADAM BRUNS Alcoa Moving Forward on Icelandic Mega-Project In a deal worth an estimated US$1 billion, Alcoa Executive Vice President G. John Pizzey, Iceland Minister of Industry Valgerdur Sverrisd?ttir and national power company Landsvirkjun‘s Managing Director Fridrik Sophusson signed a memorandum of understanding in July […]

November 1, 2002

IAMC Insider, Site Selection magazine, November 2002

  Dear Colleague: The Industrial Asset Management Council (IAMC) was founded this year to better meet the professional development needs of executives with corporate real estate and asset management responsibilities. As the organization’s first chairman, I am proud to be a part of the IAMC and to be associated with an extremely talented and dedicated […]

November 1, 2002

Best European Locations: East Beats West?

E rnst & Young’s six-month update to its annual European Investment Monitor report shows a slight rise in projects compared to the same period in 2001, driven by the resilience of the manufacturing sector, particularly in the automotive and software sectors. Unemployment in the Euro Zone’s 12 countries hovered at 8.3 percent at the end […]

August 1, 2002

Real Estate Services, September 2002, Site Selection Magazine

Worldwide Practice Named Real Estate Law Firm Of the Year The law firm of Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker, founded in Los Angeles in 1951, was named the International Real Estate Law Firm of the Year at the Chambers Global awards in London, which honors the finest performers in international commercial law. Philip Feder   […]

August 1, 2002

World Reports, Site Selection Magazine, September 2002

From Site Selection magazine, September 2002 WORLD REPORTS   | CHINA | ENGLAND | MEXICO | EUROPE | AMSTERDAM | FREE AND OPEN TRADE | As Rest of World Shuffles, China Sprints Even amid widespread concern about too much reliance on China as the new industrial powerhouse, the capital and projects just keep coming.   […]

August 1, 2002

Broadband: The Next Utility

B roadband Internet access is rapidly being perceived by governments and business as an essential utility which will soon be as important as water or electricity to economic development. Cities or regions that embrace this concept and make this new utility widely available are variously described as being “intelligent, smart or wired.”       […]

August 1, 2002

Big Blue’s Big Investment in a Smart City

TAMPA — IBM didn’t have to turn to its Deep Blue supercomputer to find the answer for this site location decision. It really wasn’t that complicated.         “The Tampa Bay Area has been a long-time focus IBM. We have many clients in this area and more than 1,300 employees involved in the […]

August 1, 2002

Introducing The Competitiveness Institute

The mission of The Competitiveness Institute is to improve the living standards and local competitiveness of regions across the world by enhancing cluster-based development initiatives.         Our focus is primarily on regional clusters – geographic groupings of firms in the same or closely related industries. The Institute’s members are active in 38 […]

August 1, 2002

Business Parks: Beijing’s Science Cities

I BM and Cisco Systems call Beijing home. Now the plan for the Beijing Science and Technology Park Construction Company Ltd. is to recruit even more big names from the West to establish operations around China’s capital city.         The lure? Brand new, high-tech corporate campuses that are virtual “Science Cities” — […]

August 1, 2002

Destination Europe: Getting E-Noticed, Site Selection Magazine, September 2002

G etting e-noticed involves far more than simply replicating your organization’s brochures online. Economic development agencies in Europe ? that might previously have sat back and let their regions’ charms speak for themselves ? are increasingly adopting a far more polished approach. This might not necessarily involve investment in all-singing, all-dancing flash-enabled Web sites, but […]

August 1, 2002

Utilities: Big Fish In a Murky Pond

H ow can you help your region grow when you’re busy managing your own growth?         That is one of several questions facing the economic development arms of utilities big and small around the United States. As a recent benchmarking and best practices survey by the Utility Economic Development Association found, utilities […]

August 1, 2002

Real Estate Alchemy: Gold From Bricks and Mortar

E xecutives of the US$11 billion Computer Sciences Corporation understand the business benefits of outsourced services as well as anyone. The El Segundo-based company earned a $344 million profit in its 2002 fiscal year as an outsourcing provider of information technology services to corporations. Check that. Approximately $40 million of Computer Science’s 2002 profits came […]

August 1, 2002

Editor’s View: A Relocation Roadmap

T ry to image a more daunting task than relocating a plant to another location. Better yet, to another country. Building a new plant is just part of the task. Relocating a plant also involves moving equipment, materials and production lines to the new facility — and disposing of the original site.       […]

June 1, 2002

European Facilites: Fallout from the Fallback

T he queues were shorter, but the destinations more varied.         That is one conclusion to draw from the annual “European Investment Monitor” report from Ernst & Young. European new facilities and expansions dropped 12 percent in 2001, but it was a good year nonetheless for “gatecrashers, EU (European Union) accession countries […]

June 1, 2002

R&D Parks With an Edge

E merging industry clusters in such high-tech fields as life sciences and software engineering are driving demand for a new breed of business park. But more than futuristic laboratory and office space is required to catch the attention of industry players seeking suitable locations in which to research and develop tomorrow’s systems and services. The […]

June 1, 2002

Tax Burdens Are Relative

S ite seekers evaluating California locations have used, for some time, the Kosmont Cost of Doing Business Survey, among other tools. Kosmont Realty Corp., Los Angeles, has gathered cost information on hundreds of communities in The Golden State.         This research has now been expanded to include 22 markets outside California, giving […]