At the Leaport County CVB meeting on June 23, staff framed the toll-road travel plazas as a high-value, captive audience and urged board support for advocacy to protect and promote the plazas’ marketing role.
Robbie (marketing staff) said the bureau records roughly 8.2 million visits to its set of travel plazas annually and compared a single busy welcome center’s traffic to some of the busiest airport terminals. "We have control of this space year round, 365," Robbie said, arguing the plazas deliver high-quality, real-world impressions that are difficult to replicate in digital campaigns.
Economic-development update: staff also told the board that an anticipated Microsoft construction project will bring an influx of construction workers, estimated at 1,500–2,000 people over the next 30–90 days, and could continue for several years in phased work. Brett and Jack said that hotels and restaurants are preparing for sustained demand, and that some regional hotel partners may help absorb overflow if local capacity is strained.
Why it matters: Plaza visitation figures represent a steady, qualified marketing audience for local attractions and lodging; the Microsoft project represents a multi-year source of incremental room nights, potential new short- and mid-term housing demand (including home purchases), and additional restaurant and service spending. Staff noted examples from neighboring counties to justify a cooperative outreach and rate strategy for construction-worker lodging.
Next steps: staff plan to present the plaza data to regional stakeholders and the mayor and to continue working with LEAP (regional business/chamber partners) on hotel coordination and rate barcoding for inbound construction labor. Board members agreed to consider availability for a July advocacy working session to refine regional messaging.