Virginia Construction Industry

Master-Planned Momentum: Regent’s Build Powers the Centerville Strategic Growth Area

By Eric S. Cavallo, Editor-in-Chief
Hampton Roads Construction News Network

VIRGINIA BEACH — Regent University has broken ground on a new Athletic & Fitness Center, marking a defining moment in both campus expansion and the broader evolution of Virginia Beach’s Centerville Strategic Growth Area. The October 10 ceremony, attended by city and university leaders, underscored more than institutional pride—it reflected a deliberate convergence between private investment and public planning, between a university’s mission and a city’s long-term vision.

For Regent, the project is the fruit of what officials call “years of prayer, vision, and dedication.” It symbolizes the university’s effort to link physical well-being and spiritual development within a single architectural statement. The facility will house multi-sport courts, strength and conditioning spaces, and training areas adaptable for intramurals—an environment designed to serve both competitive athletics and the broader student body. Its value, administrators say, lies as much in what it represents as in what it contains.

The City of Virginia Beach’s 2040 Comprehensive Plan envisions Centerville as an education-oriented growth district anchored by Regent University and the Christian Broadcasting Network. Within that framework, the new complex advances a clear civic goal: channeling development into designated nodes where infrastructure, employment, and academic life can reinforce one another. By building inward—within an existing Strategic Growth Area—rather than outward into rural tracts, Regent is giving physical shape to the city’s principle of planned, compact growth.

City planners have long described Centerville as a corridor where faith-based education, technology, and community services could coexist in a master-planned setting. Regent’s 31-acre athletics expansion, part of its larger “Royals Rise” initiative, turns that concept into practice. The investment creates an activity hub that will generate daily foot traffic, support nearby businesses, and encourage complementary public improvements along Centerville Turnpike—precisely the self-sustaining ecosystem the plan seeks to cultivate.

Beyond its planning alignment, the project carries economic weight. Each construction phase adds local jobs and contracts in a sector now defined by cautious optimism and supply-chain volatility. For Virginia Beach, the expansion reaffirms confidence in the inland portion of the city as a growth engine, balancing the resort area’s tourism economy with year-round institutional stability. The synergy of education and enterprise offers a counterweight to cyclical industries and helps retain graduates who might otherwise leave Hampton Roads.

The university has pledged careful stewardship during construction—attention to stormwater management, pedestrian safety, and environmental design. Those commitments mirror the city’s emphasis on sustainability within SGAs, where new development must protect surrounding neighborhoods and watershed systems. Each permit, grading plan, and inspection sequence will test how effectively private builders can align with public performance standards while maintaining schedule and scope.

What distinguishes this project is not its scale but its symbolism. In an era when higher-education institutions face enrollment pressures and fiscal strain, Regent’s investment signals confidence—in its mission, its students, and its city. The Athletic & Fitness Center stands as both a tangible asset and a civic statement: that disciplined planning and shared vision still have a place in how Virginia builds.

With site work underway and completion targeted within two years, the structure will soon rise as a visible marker of Centerville’s transformation from concept to community. When the doors open, Virginia Beach will not simply gain a new facility; it will gain a proof point that its comprehensive plan can, in fact, guide real projects from blueprint to reality.

About HRCNN

The Hampton Roads Construction News Network (HRCNN) delivers fact-checked, professionally edited coverage of construction, infrastructure, zoning, and development across the Commonwealth. Founded under Earthly Infrastructure®, HRCNN serves as Virginia’s independent source for insight into how policy, planning, and private enterprise shape the built environment—keeping the region informed, prepared, and committed to building safe, building strong, and building smart.

Blueprint for Change: How Three Code Reforms Will Reshape the Way Virginia Builds

By Staff Writer
Hampton Roads Construction News Network

RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia’s construction and regulatory landscape is entering a defining era. With the 2021 Uniform Statewide Building Code (USBC) now the single enforceable standard for all new permits, the Commonwealth’s builders, architects, and inspectors have crossed a clear threshold. Gone are the days of mixing provisions from older editions; in their place stands a uniform framework demanding both technical precision and code literacy—the ability to interpret and apply the evolving rules that shape the built environment.

This shift is more than procedural. It marks a cultural moment for Virginia’s building community—one that calls for fluency, coordination, and an understanding of why regulation matters as much as how it’s written. Three major reform efforts now underway will test those very skills, redefining how projects are designed, approved, and delivered statewide.

The first centers on Virginia’s single-stair debate, a discussion reshaping how cities balance safety and housing density. Under current code, multifamily buildings in the R-2 occupancy classification may use a single internal stairway only up to three stories. Legislation passed in 2024—Senate Bill 195 and House Bill 368—has directed the Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) to study whether that height limit could safely expand to as many as six stories under enhanced safety measures.

The advisory group assigned to the study includes building officials, fire marshals, architects, and code professionals. Among them is Eric S. Cavallo, founder and chief executive officer of Earthly Infrastructure®, and parent company of HRCNN. As a licensed commercial building contractor and ICC member, Cavallo offers practical perspective on how such a change could influence design logistics, construction sequencing, and emergency response.

Supporters argue that allowing taller single-stair buildings could unlock new housing types, reduce costs, and promote walkable, space-efficient infill—particularly in urban areas constrained by lot size. Opponents caution that any increase must come with expanded fire protection, smoke-control systems, and stricter material requirements to preserve life safety. The deliberations now unfolding will determine whether Virginia joins other jurisdictions experimenting with this model, or holds firm to its existing limit.

While that debate continues, the 2021 USBC is already reshaping the technical backbone of every project. The updated code raises the bar on performance: attic insulation requirements have climbed from R-49 to R-60, most interior lighting must now include dimmers or occupancy sensors, and exterior fixtures require automatic shut-off and moisture protection. For mechanical systems, the rules are just as demanding—all ductwork must undergo verified leakage testing, and ventilation systems must pass performance evaluation before occupancy is granted.

These aren’t optional upgrades; they are built-in expectations. The result is a construction environment that rewards early planning, documentation, and cross-disciplinary coordination. Compliance can no longer wait for the final inspection—it must be embedded from the first drawing to the last punch-list item.

Meanwhile, DHCD is also looking inward—examining how the building process itself can be made more efficient. A second reform initiative is focused on streamlining permits and inspections. Proposals under discussion include concurrent plan reviews, standardized inspection sequences, and clearer documentation requirements for Certificates of Occupancy.

The aim is to reduce administrative lag and bring consistency across Virginia’s jurisdictions without diluting oversight. For contractors and developers alike, those improvements could prove as impactful as any technical code amendment, cutting delays that often stall projects for weeks or months.

Together, these three efforts—egress reform, performance enhancement, and process modernization—form a convergence of change that demands close attention from every corner of the industry. The grace period for the 2018 USBC has expired, and the 2021 edition now governs every permit, review, and inspection. In this environment, code literacy is more than a professional credential; it is a business necessity. Those who understand the intent and application of each provision will be the ones who keep schedules intact, control costs, and ensure public safety in the process.

The message is clear: the rules are evolving, and Virginia’s builders must evolve with them. The industry’s future belongs to those who adapt early, advocate responsibly, and build with both precision and purpose.

About HRCNN

The Hampton Roads Construction News Network (HRCNN) is Virginia’s independent source for news and analysis on construction, zoning, infrastructure, and regulatory development. Founded under Earthly Infrastructure®, HRCNN provides clear, fact-based coverage for contractors, developers, inspectors, and policymakers across the Commonwealth. By tracking DHCD advisory activity, code-cycle reforms, and enforcement trends, HRCNN helps ensure that the region’s building community stays informed, prepared, and committed to a safer, smarter built environment—one that keeps Virginia built safe and built strong.