Indiana's New $6 billion Commercial Defense Corridor
As
construction crews fashion bridges and pour concrete, the long-awaited I-69 begins
to take shape in southwestern Indiana, representing a whole new economic opportunity for Indiana’s defense and energy sector.
Originally isolated in its early days as a Tier I ammunition depot during World
War II, the Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC) – together with the WestGate @
Crane Technology Park and other military technology assets – will soon possess
all-new logistical access through I-69 with other key commercial defense assets in the
state.
Soon
to stretch essentially from Evansville to Angola in northeast Indiana, I-69
will link together billion-dollar assets completely across the state,
effectively becoming a commercial defense and energy corridor for Indiana.
Until a few years ago, Indiana’s defense- and energy-related companies in
southern Indiana represented a relative unknown. Here’s a snapshot of the major
assets located on this emerging commercial defense corridor.
As
the state’s commercial defense activities more than tripled over the past
decade, AmeriQual in Evansville became the nation’s largest provider of Meals
Ready to Eat (MREs – formerly known as k-rations) for the U.S. military.
Continuing a 20-year transformation, NSWC Crane (located on the 100 square
miles of the Naval Support Activity facility near Crane, Indiana) today
represents a major military laboratory providing technology and support
services for all branches of the U.S. military and Homeland Security, as well
as a major technology resource for the energy storage and electric vehicle
industry.
The
WestGate @ Crane Technology Park, certified by the Indiana Economic Development
Corporation (IEDC) about five years ago, today is home to more than 10 major
commercial defense contractors serving NSWC Crane and the 5,000 defense-related
employees in the region. The park is located next to both NSWC Crane and I-69,
the latter of which will provide highly strategic for future growth. Nearby are
the Muscatatuck Urban Training Center and Camp Atterbury, Indiana’s premier
training and mobilization center. All of these assets and others are being
positioned for major economic growth by the Radius Indiana regional
partnership, located in Bedford, Indiana, which is also home to the EastGate
industrial park
About
20 miles to north of NSWC Crane and the WestGate is the main Bloomington campus
of Indiana University, home to the IU School of Informatics and faculty members
engaged in advanced defense work. Numerous defense companies serving NSWC Crane
and other national defense contracts are also located in Bloomington.
Continuing
up I-69 and S.R. 37 to Indianapolis, several major commercial defense companies
employ thousands of Hoosiers in high-impact, high-wage jobs. These include
Raytheon, Rolls Royce, Allison Transmission and other companies directly
working in defense cluster companies. North of Indianapolis on I-69 lies the
cities of Fishers and Anderson, both home to defense-related technology
companies presently doing work for the Pentagon communication systems and in
advanced battery and energy storage technology.
Continuing
above Anderson is tiny Taylor University in Upland, where students and faculty
work on NASA contracts.
New I-69 off ramp takes place just outside WestGate @ Crane Technology Park |
The
10 counties served by the Northeast Indiana Regional Partnership represent
another major hotbed of commercial defense activities. About 4,000
defense-related employees work at another division of Raytheon in Fort Wayne,
as well as ITT, General Dynamics, Northrop Grumman and other defense companies.
A major flying wing of the Indiana Air National Guard is located in Fort Wayne,
and the city is also home to the Indiana University-Purdue University campus at
Fort Wayne (IPFW). IPFW houses two centers of excellence critically related to
the defense and energy industries: wireless and systems engineering. Iotron's new $15-million electron-beam facility is just a few miles away in Columbia City, next to other commercial defense operations.
Numerous
other major assets exist in Indiana, including defense- and energy related
companies and research activities at Purdue in West Lafayette, the Rose-Hulman
Institute of Technology in Terre Haute (which has conducted graduate
engineering programs at NSWC Crane for several years) and the University of
Notre Dame in South Bend (which is also home to AM General, where the Humvee
and HUMMER military transport vehicles are manufactured).
Given
that IEDC is now aggressively marketing Indiana’s defense assets and the
Indiana General Assembly has a formal Crane Caucus led by Rep. Mark Messmer to
help support growth, Indiana could again double or even triple its current
defense and energy industry activities over the coming decade. The I-69 defense and energy corridor is
becoming real, as will thousands of new jobs as new companies join in Indiana’s
new commercial defense opportunities.
Labels: defense technology, economic development, Fort Wayne, I-69, Indiana, NSWC Crane, WestGate
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