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Greensboro, Winston-Salem, High Point The Triad Area
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Old 03-02-2020, 08:22 AM
 
Location: Greensboro
511 posts, read 510,348 times
Reputation: 417

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Quote:
Originally Posted by ushighway74 View Post
the drawback is us-70 itself. ncdot wants to widen it to a 4 lane expressway from greensboro, but theyre gonna have there hands full of lawsuits from residents living on 70.



hard to imagine a super highway cutting thru mcleansville, would alter the character of the small town.



id say they should leave most of 70 as the two lane road it is, and only add the extra turn lanes near the distribution center at the birch creek junction, and bring a portion of birch creek road back, let it cut thru the distribution center as a service road or so.





just like they did with the road at the stoney creek area just east of there on the whitsett side.
I think the plan is to just make it a 4 lane road, not an expressway. 70 is already 4 lanes up to Mt Hope Church Road. They would only widen 1.2 miles.

https://www.greensboro.com/news/loca...ee492f0bf.html
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Old 03-02-2020, 10:39 AM
 
Location: Charlotte
1,409 posts, read 1,958,699 times
Reputation: 624
More info about Publix

https://www.bizjournals.com/triad/ne..._news_headline

The article:
Quote:
Frigid morning temperatures fittingly greeted national supermarket chain Publix as it held groundbreaking ceremonies for its 1.8-million-square-foot refrigerated and frozen foods distribution center in eastern Greensboro.

While the weather was nothing new to most of the more than 100 in attendance Thursday, the central Florida-based executive team accustomed to warmer climes held the event inside a heated tent, turning ceremonial dirt in a large, signature green trough as earth moving equipment worked elsewhere on the 360-acre project.


Site work has begun off U.S. 70 and Birch Creek Road on the $400 million project that will bring some 1,000 jobs paying an average annual salary of $44,000. That made it an easy decision for the state, city and county to offer upwards of $50 million including state and local tax refunds and state grants.

"I know this will come as a shock to some of you, but trust me when I tell you that the nine members of my board don't always agree,” said Guilford Board of County Commissioners Chairman Jeff Phillips. ”But I can also tell you that on the question of our support for Publix’ decision to bring 1,000 new jobs and $400 million dollars of new investments to Guilford County … we were all in.”

According to a city report, the distribution center will produce an incremental increase in tax revenue of $19.9 million over 10 years. The company was incentivized by an 80% reduction of city and county property taxes over 10 years, equalling about $17 million each. The state offered a $15.9 million incentive package as well. North Carolina Speaker of the House Tim Moore said the facility would have an economic impact of $1.38 billion over the 12-year period of the state's Job Development Investment Grant.


“We are so happy that you decided to bring the distribution center here because we know that these jobs will be a game-changer,” said Greensboro Mayor Nancy Vaughan. “So on behalf of all of us, I just want to say thank you because we know that this is just the beginning.”

Publix is an employee-owned company base in Lakeland, Florida. With some 200,000 employees, Publix CEO Todd Jones — who began his career as a bagger in 1980 — said 13,000 have worked for Publix for 20 years or more, and 319 associates for at least 40 years.

“We believe in preparing our associates for success because we want them to stay and grow,” said Jones. "This combined focus of associate development and promotion from within culture continues to be a success for Publix.”

Land assembly was key
A portion of the new Publix distribution center will sit on land that Greensboro-based developer Roy Carroll has owned for about 15 years. Once Carroll learned of Publix’ needs in order to locate here, he worked to assemble six other parcels by meeting with the property owners, putting them under contract and helping them to close.

“It’s a team sport,” Carroll said. “We have to have sites ready to go. We had already done some of the work in terms of environmental studies, and we needed to go out and put some more property with it. This is a large project on 360 acres. Basically you could just about land a jet inside these buildings. It’s going to be very impressive.”


Construction is expected to be completed in 2021. The company has until 2025 to create all of the 1,000 jobs. The location is within a day’s drive of 17 million Publix customers and 1,200 of its stores. The scheduled completion of the Greensboro outer loop in late 2021 will provide greater access to the region.

The new distribution center is located fewer than two miles east of Interstate 785, which comprises the eastern side of the loop.

True to the company’s commitment to charity — Jones said the company has donated more than $2 billion in food to those in need over the past 10 years — he presented donations of $2,500 each to Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina and to BackPack Beginnings.

“Our philosophy of giving is simple,” Jones said. “We believe that it is not just our responsibility, but it is our privilege.”
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Old 03-16-2020, 04:22 PM
 
Location: Charlotte
1,409 posts, read 1,958,699 times
Reputation: 624
Greensboro-High Point Ranked 6th best in the Country for corporate facilties/investment.

https://www.bizjournals.com/triad/ne..._news_headline

Edward Teach you were right about Honda jet and Qorvo both being the newest economic powerhouses.
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