St. Petersburg's inclusive culture, skilled workforce, and quality of life attract new businesses to our community and help existing businesses grow. Investments in workforce development, such as St. Pete Works!, provide our residents with skills training and job placement opportunities, ensuring that our business community has access to local talent and our residents benefit from future job growth. Innovative partnerships, such as the Greenhouse, a collaboration between the City and the St. Pete Chamber, provide training, counseling, and programming to grow our small business and entrepreneur community. Strong partnerships with our economic development community, such as the St. Petersburg EDC and Pinellas County Economic Development, market our community to businesses worldwide and have helped to shape downtown St. Petersburg as an attractive destination for business.
St. Petersburg Mayor Ken Welch
What are the biggest reservations you hear from the community surrounding development in Downtown? How do you respond to these reservations?
Can you share details about the ways in which the City intentionally prepares its infrastructure—not just for today's population but projected out into the future?
Our utility infrastructure has significant unused capacity available to serve our projected population growth for many decades to come (see table below). The City’s utility infrastructure was last expanded in the 1970s to serve a projected population of 406,000 residents by 2020. This explosive population growth never materialized. During this same period (1970 to 2020), water conservation measures (low flow toilets, high efficiency washing machines, etc.) greatly reduced the amount of water each resident used per day. This resulted in utility systems with tens of millions of gallons of excess capacity in 2023 – more than enough to accommodate projected population growth in the foreseeable future.
What would you share regarding stormwater system capacity, with someone who believes our current system cannot support the level of development planned for Downtown?
New development will only generate additional stormwater if the amount of impervious area on the site is increased. In many cases, new development maintains the existing horizontal footprint of the site while expanding vertically. This type of development will not increase the amount of stormwater generated. For example, if an existing site with 20,000 square feet of impervious area (single story building plus parking lot) is replaced by a 40-story building and parking lot with the same 20,000 square feet of horizontal footprint, no new stormwater will be generated on the site.
The City’s development code does not allow new development to increase stormwater runoff leaving the site and entering the City’s stormwater system. If the development creates more stormwater than existed before, the additional stormwater must be retained onsite for percolation into the ground or released at a rate not to exceed the previous discharge rate. This is achieved through the construction of onsite stormwater detention ponds, swales, or vaults. Therefore, our current stormwater system will not be impacted by new development.
The Gas Plant District Development represents a truly unique opportunity for our community. Does this relieve pressure on office development and affordable housing in Downtown?
The decision to target 1.4 million square feet of Class A office space in the Historic Gas Plant development is a strategic move that not only addresses the scarcity of such office spaces in Downtown St. Petersburg but also reflects a comprehensive approach to urban development.
Leveraging a Public/Private partnership and incorporating a diversity of uses, including hotel, retail, entertainment, and market-rate housing, in the redevelopment plan can offer several advantages:
Downtown is experiencing 5-year job growth that outpaces the region and state. What is happening locally to bolster these job counts?
St. Petersburg's inclusive culture, skilled workforce, and quality of life attract new businesses to our community and help existing businesses grow. Investments in workforce development, such as St. Pete Works!, provide our residents with skills training and job placement opportunities, ensuring that our business community has access to local talent and our residents benefit from future job growth. Innovative partnerships, such as the Greenhouse, a collaboration between the City and the St. Pete Chamber, provide training, counseling, and programming to grow our small business and entrepreneur community. Strong partnerships with our economic development community, such as the St. Petersburg EDC and Pinellas County Economic Development, market our community to businesses worldwide and have helped to shape downtown St. Petersburg as an attractive destination for business.
Downtown has a significant concentration of leisure and hospitality operations, compared to peer downtowns. What enables this segment to succeed in our Downtown?
The success of the leisure and hospitality sector in Downtown St. Petersburg, compared to peer downtowns, can be attributed to a combination of factors that contribute to the area's unique appeal and vibrancy. Several key elements enable the significant concentration and success of leisure and hospitality operations in Downtown St. Pete:
St. Petersburg ranks #1 in the state for work-life balance and mental health. What comes to mind in terms of ways companies are promoting happy, healthy workplaces?
In general, employers who promote inclusivity will have a happier workforce. This comes down to:
Work-life balance is also a significant component of happiness, especially with younger generation employees. Factors in striking this favorable balance include:
What are the segments that the city is actively working to recruit and how?
The Grow Smarter Strategy, an economic development strategy developed between the City and the St. Pete Chamber back in 2014, identified five industries primed for growth and development in St. Petersburg: Marine & Life Science, Data Analytics, Specialized Manufacturing, Creative Arts & Design, and Financial Services. These industries serve as the basis for the City's business attraction efforts. Recently, Pinellas County Economic Development and the St. Petersburg EDC have launched efforts to update their strategic plans, including analyzing key growth industries in our community. The City continues to work with our economic development partners on these efforts, which will provide opportunities to review and refresh these target industries.
What is the latest regarding Grow Smarter?
The Grow Smarter Strategy was developed in 2014. While the impacts of the strategy can be felt throughout our community, such as the creation of the St. Pete Innovation District, the St. Pete EDC, and the advancement of the Historic Gas Plant District, it is now a decade old and in need of an update.
In partnership with the City, the St. Pete Chamber has launched a new effort in 2023 - the Leadership Alliance - to convene key decision-makers and policymakers to discuss topics that are core to our community's growth and overall health. Guided by the City's Five Pillars of Progress, these conversations will lead to new programs, partnerships, and opportunities to grow St. Petersburg's economy.