About
Gwinnett
With
experts predicting Gwinnett to become Georgia’s largest county
in less than five years and its enviable proximity to the state’s
leading colleges and universities, this economic powerhouse has
emerged as metro Atlanta’s leading hub for technology, bioscience,
and innovative companies of the future.
Located just 20 minutes northeast of downtown Atlanta and covering
437 square miles, Gwinnett is one of the southeast’s leading
high-tech hubs. A leading research and development center, it is
linked to the top six research colleges and universities in Georgia,
and is home to more than 850 manufacturers, 1,300 high-tech companies,
275 bioscience-related and 375 international firms. Gwinnett is
home to more than 10 percent of the total metro Atlanta high-tech
companies and seven of the region’s top 25 high-tech employers
operate facilities in Gwinnett. The current labor force is approaching
400,000 and includes more bioscience employees than any other county
in Georgia.
That labor force is also well-educated thanks to one of the nation’s
top performing public and private school systems. It’s the
home to the largest, most diverse, and most successful public school
system in the state. The result: 85 percent of Gwinnett’s
students continue education after high school.
Since 1985 Gwinnett has rated first nationally in economic strength
by a Woods and Poole study documenting local employment, salary,
education, manufacturing and service sector diversity, employment
growth and household income. Since 1997 Gwinnett County’s
bonds were elevated to triple-AAA status, one of only 20 counties
in the United States with such a distinction.
Gwinnett’s solid transportation network is well facilitated
by roadways, air, rail, and ports. Highways I-85 and I-985 traverse
the county, as do Georgia Highways 316, 29, 78, 23, and 141. The
county and state have invested more than $700 million dollars in
recent road improvements including the reconstruction and improvements
to the I-85/316 interchange, the largest road project in DOT history.
Gwinnett is also home to more than 60 major business parks including
the fourth largest high-tech business park in Georgia, Technology
Park/Atlanta, with almost 3.1 million square feet. Each enjoy water,
sewer, power, fiber optics, and zoning in place with a range of
spaces and competitive leasing rates. The availability of affordable
land resources and receptive developers makes the county an ideal
setting for new construction.
Hotels, restaurants, schools, and residential communities are among
the finest and most diverse in metro Atlanta. Two of the region’s
most successful luxury home communities, Sugarloaf and River Club,
nestled in Gwinnett. Recreational facilities abound and the 80-acre
Gwinnett Center campus is home to the Arena, Convention Center and
Performing Art Center, providing first-class concerts, theatre,
meeting and convention space. Gwinnett’s growing population
also supports a thriving retail market that tops annual revenues
of nearly $13 billion.
Gwinnett continues to experience unprecedented growth, attracting
a skilled, motivated workforce. Job growth has been strong, with
more jobs being created in Gwinnett in 2005 than in Cobb, Fulton,
and DeKalb Counties combined. It is one of the youngest and fastest
growing counties in the country, with a population of more than
730,000 and 395,000 jobs. Its economic strategy is to balance quality
economic expansion with civic improvements and to offer its citizens
the highest quality of life.
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