The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

AUGUSTA CENTER EXPANDS BEFORE IT’S BUILT

Deal: Demand drives $35M second phase for center.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

AUGUSTA — The budding cybersecur­ity center on the outskirts of downtown Augusta is set to dramatical­ly expand before the first phase is even completed.

Gov. Nathan Deal and state officials on Wednesday broke ground on a $35 million addition to the cybersecur­ity campus, which is to be built a few steps from the $60 million centerpiec­e that is still under constructi­on.

Together, the Cyber Innovation and Training Center and the incubator hub are expected to be just the initial phases of a cybersecur­ity research and developmen­t compound on a 17-acre site along the Savannah River.

“There are times in life when opportunit­ies present themselves,” Deal said, adding: “We’ve seized the opportunit­y to do something about cybersecur­ity.”

The Augusta area is staking a major claim on the growing cybersecur­ity field. More than 40,000 Georgia residents now work in the field, including about 13,000 in the Augusta area.

Many of them are code-breakers and intelligen­ce analysts who work at nearby Fort Gordon, which is home to a major National Security Agency command. The Army will open a new Cyber Command on site this year.

Deal announced last year that the state is putting skin in the game to help train the next wave of cybersecur­ity experts.

The campus sits on Augusta University’s riverfront land, and it includes classroom space, research laboratori­es cleared for top-secret work and a “cyber range” where new intelligen­ce weapons will be created and tested. The Georgia Bureau of Investigat­ion also will house a cybersecur­ity facility on site. Both phases are set to open in the next year.

Why build a second phase when the first one still hasn’t been completed?

“Demand, demand, demand .... ,” Deal said, adding that the state was flooded by requests from government agencies and private contractor­s for more space after he announced the first phase last year.

The governor, entering his last year in office, said the project is a chance to help an east Georgia region that’s in need of high-paying jobs.

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