Stockton Aviation Research and Technology Park To Bring Jobs, Diversify Region鈥檚 Economy

Breaking ground for the first of seven buildings at the Stockton Aviation Research & Technology Park in Egg Harbor Township, N.J. on May 15, 2017 from left, are: Howard Kyle, Atlantic County chief of staff; Tim Edmunds, Atlantic County Improvement Authority (ACIA) director of projects; ACIA Chairman Roy Foster; Edward H. Salmon, president of the SARTP board of trustees; 番茄社区app President Harvey Kesselman; Atlantic County Executive Dennis Levinson; Jaime Figueroa, deputy director of the FAA William J. Hughes Technical Center; N.J. Congressman Frank LoBiondo, R-2nd; Washington Congressman Rick Larsen, D-2nd; John C. Lamey, Jr., executive director of the ACIA; and Joseph Sheairs, former executive director of the SARTP. Photo: Susan Allen/ 番茄社区app
For Immediate Release; with photos and rendering on
Contact: Maryjane Briant
News and Media Relations Director
Galloway, N.J. 08205
Maryjane.Briant@stockton.edu
(609) 652-4593
Galloway, N.J. - Federal, state, county, municipal and university officials today broke ground for the first of seven buildings at the Stockton Aviation Research and Technology Park (SARTP) in Egg Harbor Township, N.J., a major step in diversifying the region鈥檚 economy.
The $17.2 million, 66,000-square-foot building is being constructed in the 58-acre park, located adjacent to the FAA William J. Hughes Technical Center, the nation's premier air transportation laboratory, and the Atlantic City International Airport.
The park will offer high-speed connectivity to FAA Tech Center laboratories, and state-of-the-art conference rooms. An FAA laboratory will occupy 7,000 square feet with an additional 47,000 of rental space for laboratories and offices.
鈥淎viation drives $1.5 trillion - or 5.4 percent of G.D.P (Gross Domestic Product),鈥 said Deputy Director Jaime Figueroa of the FAA Tech Center. 鈥淪ARTP is positioned to leverage the economic possibilities of aviation.鈥 He added, 鈥淭he money that鈥檚 earned here will be spent here.鈥
鈥淭his is just the beginning of Atlantic County鈥檚 future,鈥 said County Executive Dennis Levinson, adding that tourism and gaming are still important but economic diversification is necessary. 鈥淭his is why we put our money where our mouth is.鈥
The Atlantic County Improvement Authority (ACIA) helped to provide financing for the building, which is scheduled for completion in the second quarter of 2018, said John Lamey, the ACIA鈥檚 executive director.
Stockton President Harvey Kesselman said the research park is a collaboration 鈥渂etween the academy and industry,鈥 offering Stockton and other universities opportunities in research and education.
鈥淲e consider this project to be a central instrument for change,鈥 Kesselman said, adding that Stockton鈥檚 commitment to the project 鈥渨ill be unwavering.鈥
All the speakers noted that the project has been a decade in the making, and cited the strong partnerships and determination needed to bring it to fruition. Howard Kyle, Levinson鈥檚 chief of staff, was singled out for praise, though Levinson joked, 鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e getting a raise, Howard.鈥
Edward H. Salmon, president of the SARTP Board of Directors, said it took five partners to make this work:
- Congressman Frank LoBiondo, R-2nd, chairman of the House Aviation Subcommittee;
- Atlantic County government, including the executive, chief of staff, the ACIA and the freeholders;
- 番茄社区app and President Kesselman;
- The FAA Tech Center;
- The Stockton SARTP board and staff, along with partners such as the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority, the N.J. Economic Development Authority and the South Jersey Transportation Authority.
Levinson also recognized Ambassador and former Congressman William J. Hughes, for whom the Tech Center is named, and LoBiondo, saying, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know where we would be without the two of them.鈥
LoBiondo said the SARTP is 鈥渁 guarantee of opportunity which we have not had up to this point.鈥 He praised Levinson as 鈥渁 visionary always looking forward to what鈥檚 best for Atlantic County and the region.鈥
He also thanked Kesselman and Stockton for 鈥渟tepping up in a way no other organization in the area could have done;鈥 Joseph Sheairs, the SARTP鈥檚 former executive director, for his work in making construction of the first building a reality; and Kyle and his own chief of staff, Maryannie Harper, for a decade of work.
The congressman said the Tech Center will provide 鈥渃utting edge鈥 expertise and research, 鈥渁ll right here.鈥
He introduced his fellow congressman, Democrat Rick Larsen of Washington鈥檚 2nd District and the ranking member of the House aviation committee which LoBiondo chairs. Larsen said he represents 23,000 Boeing employees who live in his district and another 7,000 who work there. He is visiting South Jersey to learn more about the connections between the FAA Tech Center鈥檚 work and his district.
Larsen said the FAA staff is working on aviation cybersecurity and unmanned aircraft systems and how they will be used by businesses such as Amazon to deliver products. 鈥淐ommercial space is literally the next frontier in the FAA鈥檚 world,鈥 he said.
Stockton and the SARTP are members of the Virginia Tech team known as the Mid-Atlantic Aviation Partnership (MAAP) chosen by the FAA to help with the testing of drones under the federal government's plan to commercialize unmanned aircraft systems over the next several years. Staff at the FAA also has a key role developing the NextGen system that will switch the nation鈥檚 air traffic control from a radar-based system to a satellite-based system.
The SARTP building was designed by AECOM, a multinational engineering firm with headquarters in Los Angeles which repeatedly has been ranked #1 in Engineering News Record鈥檚 鈥淭op 500 Design Firms.鈥 Command Company, Inc. of Egg Harbor City, N.J., is the general contractor, and the facility is being built by Hessert Construction Group LLC, of Marlton, N.J.
John Wiley and Joe Salvatore, both experienced leaders in aviation, have been named interim director of the SARTP as a team. A national search for a new, permanent director will be conducted.
For more information, visit: stockton.edu/nartp/