『The Site and Facility Planning Podcast』のカバーアート

The Site and Facility Planning Podcast

The Site and Facility Planning Podcast

著者: Area Development
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概要

The Area Development Site & Facility Planning Podcast is your front-row seat to the forces reshaping where America builds. Each episode dives into the realities behind corporate location strategy, featuring sharp conversations with the people making the calls — CEOs, site consultants, utility leaders, workforce experts, and developers. We unpack the trends that matter now: power constraints, workforce bottlenecks, industrial megasites, permitting gridlock, reshoring, and the race for AI infrastructure. If you’re planning a facility, expanding your footprint, or simply trying to understand the next wave of U.S. competitiveness, this is the show that keeps you ahead.2026 Area Development マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ 政治・政府 経済学
エピソード
  • Speedy Data Center Build Outs, Industries of the Future, and a First Person Account of a CEO Going Alone on Site Selection
    2026/02/17

    Building the AI Economy: Faster Data Centers, Smarter Site Selection, and the Industries of the Future Host Andrew Greiner opens the Area Development Podcast with a focus on how the AI economy is already straining land, power, labor, and capital. The first segment covers a partnership between JLL (Matt Landek) and Infra Partners (Michalis Grigoratos) to compress AI data center timelines by manufacturing prefabricated facilities in parallel with site preparation, cutting roughly 13–22 months (about 48%) from hyperscale development to improve “time to first token.” They discuss power as the primary bottleneck, the shift toward placing data centers near generation in energy-rich regions (including places like West Texas), continued capital demand for data center exposure, and new risks from rapid hardware obsolescence where five-year AI leases can span a “20-year” technology change; a 100MW AI data center is described as roughly $1.2–$1.3B in real estate plus $5–$6B in GPUs. They also highlight labor constraints, including an aging trades workforce and increasing time-to-fill needs, emphasizing upskilling and retraining. The second segment features Justin McAfee (CEO/founder of WrightOne) on relocating to Cedar Park, Texas for an HQ and 18,000-square-foot manufacturing facility tied to 164 jobs and a $15M investment. McAfee describes WrightOne’s fan manufacturing and recycling model (reusing two-thirds of components up to four lifecycles), the need to launch U.S.-based recycling, a rapid and competitive site search across ~50 cities, and why Cedar Park won based on execution, alignment, and speed rather than incentive dollars; he cites community coordination (including state participation), smooth permitting, workforce draw, and workforce development such as Leander ISD’s associate-degree pathway and soldering-related skills. McAfee shares three best practices: broaden the city list beyond initial assumptions, expect more responsiveness from smaller/outskirt communities than major metros, and get professional help navigating economic development language and process. The final segment with Mark Cote (vice chair at Savills) explains identifying “industries of the future” by following federal support and private capital at the intersection of “K Street, Wall Street, and Main Street,” including the Department of Energy and the Office of Strategic Capital’s efforts to bridge the “Valley of Death” between pilot and scale. He points to areas such as geothermal, small modular nuclear, nuclear fusion (a longer, ~10-year horizon), private defense and drone technology influenced by the war in Ukraine, onsite generation amid growing power constraints, and next-generation critical minerals and industrial process innovations like graphite flakes and cleaner iron production aligned with federal priorities. 00:00 AI Economy Is Here 00:57 Race for First Token 01:31 Prefab Data Center Partnership 02:49 Building Faster in Parallel 03:34 Power Becomes the Bottleneck 05:02 Capital and Planning Risks 05:41 Hardware Cycles and Depreciation 07:10 Workforce and Skills Crunch 08:28 AI Infrastructure Takeaways 08:53 RightOne Site Selection Story 10:43 Why Cedar Park Won 12:11 Incentives and Cooling Innovation 13:38 Workforce Pipeline and Training 16:19 Expansion and Supply Chain Strategy 19:02 Site Selection Advice for Founders 20:58 Industries of the Future Framework 22:28 Energy and Defense Bets 25:07 Critical Minerals and Clean Industry 27:08 Wrap Up and Subscribe

    Mentioned in this episode:

    This episode is sponsored by TNECD

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    28 分
  • North Carolina Secretary of Commerce Lee Lilley and Christopher Chung, CEO of the Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina
    2025/11/26

    North Carolina’s Growth Playbook: Talent, Infrastructure, and Supply Chain Resilience Host Steve Kaelble interviews North Carolina Secretary of Commerce Lee Lilley and Economic Development Partnership of North Carolina CEO Christopher Chung about why North Carolina ranks highly for business, including No. 1 in access to qualified labor and a 2025 Platinum Shovel Award. They credit long-standing investments in higher education, community colleges, decentralized workforce programs, and strong in-migration, plus talent pipelines from universities, community colleges, and military transitions. They discuss boosting labor participation by addressing barriers such as childcare, transportation, housing, and broadband, citing state leadership roles, task forces, Charlotte’s transit funding effort, and Wilson’s subsidized rideshare. On supply chains, they emphasize ready sites, cost-competitive rural locations, and supplier matchmaking, with examples including Siemens Energy transformers and JetZero’s Greensboro aircraft project. They highlight critical infrastructure needs—roads, ports, airports, water/sewer—and anticipate continued manufacturing cluster growth and major workforce impacts from AI. 00:00 Welcome and Guests 01:01 Workforce Talent Edge 02:57 Growing Population Pipeline 06:04 Removing Participation Barriers 10:58 Supply Chain Resilience 17:37 Infrastructure That Wins 21:55 Rural Growth Strategy 23:45 Five Year Outlook and AI 28:42 Closing Thanks

    Mentioned in this episode:

    This episode is sponsored by TNECD

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    30 分
  • Power, Timber, and the World Cup — How Energy, Materials, and Cities Are Being Rebuilt
    2025/10/31

    From next-generation energy to next-generation cities, this episode of Frontline looks at how innovation is reshaping the foundations of American industry. Segment 1 — Nano Nuclear: James Walker, CEO of Nano Nuclear Energy, explains why small modular reactors could soon power data centers, defense sites, and remote industries — and what’s holding them back. Segment 2 — Building with Timber: Graycor’s John Denbo takes us inside an Amazon warehouse built entirely from mass timber — one of the first large-scale tests of sustainable construction at industrial scale. Segment 3 — The City as Platform: Atlanta’s Rich McKay, Katie Kirkpatrick, and David Cummings discuss how the 2026 FIFA World Cup fits into a bigger plan for infrastructure, mobility, and startup growth. Hosted by Andy Greiner, Editor of Area Development Magazine.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    This episode is sponsored by TNECD

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    21 分
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