Greensboro, N.C., June 15, 2026, 09:02 EDT
- JetZero is set to break ground Monday at PTI on an 8-million-square-foot aircraft plant. Davie County Chamber and Tourism
- NC Commerce said the project is set for more than $4.7 billion in planned investment, with links to over 14,500 jobs. NC Commerce.
- Greensboro wants 10,000 new housing units by 2030. City officials say the area faces a major housing shortage. The Road to 10,000 plan targets that figure. Greensboro NC
JetZero is set to break ground Monday at Piedmont Triad International Airport. The company lists a 10 a.m. to 11 a.m. EDT ceremony at what it’s calling the “Factory of the Future.” JetZero says it plans an 8-million-square-foot aircraft facility at the site, describing it as the first greenfield large-aircraft plant of its kind in the U.S. in a generation. Davie County Chamber and Tourism
Greensboro’s housing plan got tagged because of the project’s size. State officials last year said JetZero would put more than $4.7 billion into PTI and bring over 14,560 jobs to Guilford County. They said the average salary will be $89,340, higher than the county’s $60,195 average. Those jobs could put more than $1.3 billion a year into regional payroll, according to the state. NC Commerce
Greensboro’s Road to 10,000 campaign is targeting 10,000 new housing units by 2030, aiming at a mix of prices and types. The city says it wants projects to come online faster, teaming with both public and private groups. Officials are calling it a “critical housing shortage” on the housing page, saying the lack of supply is holding back growth, making it harder to keep talent, and straining the community. Greensboro NC
Hiring is ramping up as the project heads toward groundbreaking. Deloitte said Monday it will team with JetZero on the Believers program in Greensboro, working alongside UNCG, Guilford County Schools, Greensboro Chamber of Commerce and the National Math and Science Initiative. The plan is to reach about 5,000 Guilford County students and teachers. “Building the future of aerospace starts in today’s classrooms,” said JetZero CEO and co-founder Tom O’Leary. PR Newswire
JetZero is still under the microscope. The News & Observer said Monday North Carolina officials want to show JetZero can deliver where big projects like VinFast and Boom Supersonic have not. Commerce Secretary Lee Lilley told the News & Observer that building out JetZero won’t be simple, “but certainly one that seems achievable.” Raleigh News & Observer
Incentives for the deal are under pressure. Reuters puts state performance incentives at over $1.1 billion over close to 40 years, all tied to jobs, plus another $450 million in airport funding. The AP totals more than $2.35 billion in state and local incentives by the 2060s, depending on whether targets for spending and jobs are met. For Greensboro, a big question is whether its factories, training programs, and housing can keep pace. Reuters apnews.com