On the face of it, Hampton Roads ought to be a technological powerhouse because of the high-level federal research facilities and defense installations located in the area, plus a higher education community of considerable size. Yet, while we can claim the second-greatest technological development of any region in the Commonwealth, we are a very distant second to Northern Virginia and have never realized our potential. Future prosperity in technology is tied to developing the modeling and simulation industry that has sprouted primarily in Suffolk, stimulating Eastern Virginia Medical School’s potential in conjunction with Old Dominion University and vastly increasing support for the sciences and engineering at several institutions, but espe...
Our regional economy has slowed down to the national average after five superb years of growth fuele...
Economically speaking, the 21st century has been a good one for Hampton Roads. By many measures – es...
The outlook for increased regional economic growth has improved. Each of the major building blocks o...
On the face of it, Hampton Roads ought to be a technological powerhouse because of the high-level fe...
The demise of JFCOM has reduced the size of, but hardly eliminated, modeling and simulation in our r...
Hampton Roads needs skilled workers. With unemployment approaching historical lows and the demand fo...
The three pillars of our regional economy (defense, the port and tourism) have improved and prospect...
Vision Hampton Roads provides a “dashboard” of critical performance variables that helps us determin...
For the first time in a decade, the Hampton Roads economy is poised to grow for the third straight y...
This is Old Dominion University\u27s seventh annual State of the Region report. While it represents ...
Our regional economy continues to perform better than the Commonwealth of Virginia and the nation. T...
We compare Hampton Roads to other metropolitan areas by means of more than 30 different economic, so...
2022 may be characterized as the “best of times and worst of times.” Unemployment continued to fall,...
Our regional economy has slowed down to the national average after five superb years of growth fuele...
Economically speaking, the 21st century has been a good one for Hampton Roads. By many measures – es...
The outlook for increased regional economic growth has improved. Each of the major building blocks o...
On the face of it, Hampton Roads ought to be a technological powerhouse because of the high-level fe...
The demise of JFCOM has reduced the size of, but hardly eliminated, modeling and simulation in our r...
Hampton Roads needs skilled workers. With unemployment approaching historical lows and the demand fo...
The three pillars of our regional economy (defense, the port and tourism) have improved and prospect...
Vision Hampton Roads provides a “dashboard” of critical performance variables that helps us determin...
For the first time in a decade, the Hampton Roads economy is poised to grow for the third straight y...
This is Old Dominion University\u27s seventh annual State of the Region report. While it represents ...
Our regional economy continues to perform better than the Commonwealth of Virginia and the nation. T...
We compare Hampton Roads to other metropolitan areas by means of more than 30 different economic, so...
2022 may be characterized as the “best of times and worst of times.” Unemployment continued to fall,...
Our regional economy has slowed down to the national average after five superb years of growth fuele...
Economically speaking, the 21st century has been a good one for Hampton Roads. By many measures – es...
The outlook for increased regional economic growth has improved. Each of the major building blocks o...