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Old Heat CERB Feasibility Study | 27 <br />3. Adaptive Reuse of State Resources <br />The project revitalizes a historic public building. Instead of constructing <br />new facilities, Old Heat transforms an underused structure into a hub for <br />innovation, training, and business development. It stands as a visible <br />example of cross-regional collaboration that yields measurable economic <br />returns and expands access to opportunities for Washingtonians often left <br />out of the innovation economy. <br />4. Model for Statewide Replication of Strategic East–West Alignment <br />The Old Heat project demonstrates how rural communities can convert <br />legacy infrastructure into competitive, innovation-driven economies. By <br />strengthening Central Washington’s connections to statewide manufacturing <br />and technology supply chains, it makes the entire Washington economy <br />more resilient and competitive. Old Heat provides a replicable model <br />showing how rural and urban regions can function as one integrated system <br />by sharing talent, technology, and opportunity across the state. <br />Together, these four objectives establish the foundation for Old Heat’s design <br />and operations. Each translates directly into measurable actions that attract <br />high-value industries, build local capacity, and ensure that technology, wages, <br />and opportunity flow across regions rather than concentrate in one. The project <br />is intentionally structured to serve as an “accelerator of accelerators,” both <br />through the programs it houses and through the broader regional innovation and <br />development initiatives it supports. <br />This approach is already gaining external validation. The National Science <br />Foundation has funded Central Washington University to increase institutional <br />and regional capacity for advanced technology and workforce development, a <br />mission that aligns directly with Old Heat’s purpose. The model guiding this effort, <br />described in the following section, focuses on nurturing the dynamic agency of <br />the region’s communities as the true engine of long-term competitiveness. <br />Rethinking Economic Development in Distressed Regions <br />In regions such as Central Washington, economic development has often been <br />constrained by immediate challenges, such as limited housing, labor market <br />mismatches, and underfunded infrastructure, which consume much of the <br />attention and capacity of local decision-makers. This dynamic prevents long- <br />THE OLD HEAT BUILDING <br />Old Heat: A Multiplicative Enterprise for Regional Economic Development <br />The Old Heat project involves re-purposing the facility to bridge the under- <br />leveraged capabilities of the Central Washington region to the needs and <br />opportunities of the larger WA state economic ecosystem. In this respect, the <br />facility and the activity related to it serve as a funnel for high-value industry to <br />successfully integrate their supply chain activity into regional resources and <br />capabilities. It also serves as an on-ramp for local industry and entrepreneurship <br />to be competitive in national and international markets through activities such as <br />competitive technology integration, university resource collaboration, and supply <br />chain support. <br />To guide this work, Old Heat is organized around four core objectives that define <br />its purpose and ensure that every investment, tenant, and partnership advances <br />long-term prosperity for both the region and the state. <br />OLD HEAT: MAIN OBJECTIVES <br />1. High-Wage Job Creation and Rural Economic Mobility <br />Old Heat converts state investment into high-paying and technology- <br />based jobs in areas such as advanced manufacturing, aerospace, ag-tech, <br />and clean energy. It equips residents with technical skills that align with <br />Washington’s innovation economy, helping rural communities participate <br />in high-wage sectors that typically cluster in metro areas. This approach <br />expands opportunity across the state without expanding urban sprawl. <br />2. Technology Commercialization and Statewide Tech Diffusion <br />Through the activities of Central Washington University (CWU), Old Heat <br />connects state research capacity to regional industry, commercializing <br />technologies and spreading innovation beyond metro centers. By linking <br />Central Washington to the state’s major innovation hubs, it strengthens the <br />overall Washington ecosystem, ensuring that breakthroughs developed in <br />one region create jobs and value across all regions.