Many of the World's Most Successful Companies Have Discovered that Owensboro, Kentucky is a Great Place to Build Their Business
Centrally located between the Midwest and the South along the
banks of the beautiful Ohio River, Owensboro, Kentucky has
recently embarked on its renaissance with over $1.5 billion in
public investment. The third largest city in Kentucky,
Owensboro is an optimally sized urban oasis—a beautiful,
friendly, safe, and progressive place with sophisticated
amenities, stable growth, a balanced economy and a short
commute.
A market-based downtown plan will result in $120 million in publicly funded infrastructure and
amenities to reinvent downtown Owensboro as a walkable, mixed use urban center with the
addition of a new convention center, hotel, marina, arts and cultural venues, as well as ample
downtown housing. Owensboro offers all the conveniences
of a major metropolitan center along with the comfort, safety,
and charm of a small community.
World Class Livability
- CNN/Money magazine Top 100 Places to Live in the United States
- Housing costs 87 percent cheaper than U.S. average
- Arts and amenities to rival large metros
- Moderate climate with four seasons
- Lowest crime rate in the southern United States
Extremely friendly to business
- Innovative tax incentives and business development programs
- Highly skilled workforce
- Access to world-class research universitiesand top ranked community college
- Access to North American market from a safe, stable and cost-effective location, within 600 miles of nearly half the population, income and retail sales of the U.S.
- An economy.com survey ranked Owensboro second among communities in a 15 state region based on unit labor costs, tax burden and energy costs.
Location
Our excellent highway, rail, river, and air access allows commerce to flow quickly to all parts of the world. A one-day drive to major markets such as Atlanta, Chicago, Cincinnati, Detroit, Indianapolis, Kansas City, Louisville, Memphis, Nashville and St. Louis makes Greater Owensboro an excellent location for just-in-time deliveries.
Labor Market |
City-County |
Region |
Population |
94,242 |
580,868 |
Labor Force Age 25-54 |
40% |
41% |
% with high school |
89.5% |
84.3% |
% with degree |
22% |
25% |
% with some college |
42% |
41% |
Unemployment (2009) |
9.3% |
9.8% |
Colleges/ Universities |
4 |
8 |
College enrollment |
8,642 |
23,500 |
Household Income |
$40,253 |
$36,578 |
Personal Income |
$27,473 |
$25,500 |
Broadband
The availability of reliable broadband in Owensboro is second to none and there are a variety of service providers available to meet your broadband demands.
Owensboro is unique to many communities in that it has a municipally owned and operated fiber optic, as well as wireless network. Connection speeds with T-1 fiber are up to 10 Mbps or you may choose point to point access with speeds up to 100 Mbps. Cable and DSL service is also available with speeds up to 5.0 Mbps.
Greater Owensboro is also a partner in the Connect GRADD project. This ambitious and award-winning project will provide wireless high speed internet access to the seven county region surrounding and including Daviess County for a total coverage of over 2,600 square miles. This project is slated to be completed in 2008.
OwensboroWorks.com
OwensboroWorks.com offers existing businesses, relocating companies, and small start-ups access to the region’s most valuable commodity—our people! Owensboro Works is a unique tool to assist employers, job seekers, and economic development officials to build the workforce of the future.
OwensboroWorks.com is a web-based regional talent pool of more than 5,500 potential employees organized in an interactive, user-friendly database. Owensboro Works is accessible and free of charge to businesses and job seekers.
“Five Star” Quality of Life
Greater Owensboro is well-known for a friendly, small town atmosphere offering entertainment and recreational options to rival many larger towns. From the visual and performing arts to recreation to community celebrations and festivals, Owensboro has it!
Emerging Entrepreneurial Atmosphere
Owensboro is a great place for high-tech entrepreneurs and start-up companies. Owensboro has created a life science partnership with Kentucky's world-class research institutons and early state funding resources such as the Owensboro-based Emerging Ventures Fund. Kentucky is the only state to match both Phase i and Phase II federal SBIR-STTR awards to high-tech businesses.
Emerging Ventures Center for Innovation provides technical support and start-up assistance to entrepreneurs, scientists, and small business people perfecting and maturing their ideas and business concepts. The center is part of Kentucky’s Innovation and Commercialization framework, offers free management training and can help in developing business plans and obtaining private funding.
The Centre for Business and Research is a 40,000 square foot business acceleator equiped with wet labs for science based startup companies. Several universities have research faculty based at the Centre with expertise in plant biotechnology, innovative food production, and quality process control.
A World Center in the Plant Natural Product Industry 
The Greater Owensboro Life Science Partnership is committed to establishing the Greater Owensboro Region as a world center of the plant natural product and plant made pharmaceutical industry. Kentucky Bioprocessing, LLC (KBP) is a contract bioprocessor with state-of-the-art facilities, experienced personnel and intellectual property providing customers with an unequaled quality and range of bioprocessing services. Customers are workedwith on a confidential basis to extract purified proteins and other value added products from plants and other organic materials. The Owensboro Cancer Research Program (OCRP) the Owensboro Medical Health System is establishing itself as a cutting edge facility for groundbreaking biopharmaceutical research through its partnership with the James Graham Brown Cancer Center at the University of Louisville. The facilities, which include four state-of-the-art 1,000 square foot labs, are designed to support five to six U of L researchers who will collaborate with and support researchers James Graham Brown Cancer Center, several of which are based at OCRP.
Health Care Hub
As the state’s third largest medical center, the Owensboro Medical Health System is positioning
Owensboro as a medical hub.
OMHS operates a full-service hospital, providing the
services of 200 physicians and employing a workforce of
more than 3,000. The hospital provides premiere heart services through its partnership with Louisville’s Jewish Hospital Heart and Lung Institute
and is home to the Owensboro Cancer Research Program, a joint venture with James
Graham Brown Cancer Center at the University of Louisville, which include full-time U of
L researchers linked to the plant biotech industry and Kentucky BioProcessing.
OMHS recently announced the construction of a new $400 million, 500-bed facility that
will add 800 health care jobs over the next five years.
Education and Training
The Greater Owensboro region boasts some of the finest schools in Kentucky. The region is home to four colleges and universities with connections to various others in the state and throughout the labor market.
Owensboro Community and Technical College is a comprehensive community college with an enrollment of 5,000 offering two-year degree programs in general education and technical studies as well as customized business and industry training. The new $15 million Advanced Technology Center specializes in advanced manufacturing and engineering technology with a state-of-the-art rapid proto-typing center.
- Kentucky Wesleyan College is a religiously affiliated liberal arts college enrolling 700 students.
- Brescia University is a Catholic liberal arts university with an enrollment of 600.
- Western Kentucky University-Owensboro Regional Campus offers a host of undergraduate and graduate degree programs. The courses are offered by various methods including face to face, IVS and online.
Incentives and Financing
Kentucky offers a large number of progressive incentives and seed capital funds to businesses.
The following list includes those state and local incentives that are generally most applicable to
business and industries considering locating or starting a business in Greater Owensboro. For
more information go to http://edc.owensboro.com
-
City of Owensboro Occupational Tax Abatement for Infrastructure Development
-
Kentucky Economic Improvement Act (KEIA)
-
Kentucky Industrial Development Act (KIDA)
-
Kentucky Jobs Development Act (KJDA)
-
Kentucky Rural Economic Development Act (KREDA)- Hancock and Ohio counties
-
Industrial Revenue Bonds- local industrial development authority
-
Commonwealth Seed Capital Fund
-
Rural Innovation Fund
-
Owensboro Office Central Region Innovation and Commercialization Center- High Technology Development Funds
-
Phase I and Phase II federal SBIR-STTR awards to high-tech businesses.
-
|
Sites and Buildings
Greater Owensboro offers businesses a wealth of options for site selection, featuring more than 4,000 acres of available industrial land in a three county area. Existing available buildings vary from small commercial and industrial structures to large warehouse facilities.
-
Mid-America Airpark is a 450 acre fully equipped and shovel-ready business park adjacent to the Owensboro-Daviess County Regional Airport and the Wendell H. Ford Expressway.
-
Bluegrass Crossings Regional Business Centre at the intersection of the William H. Natcher Parkway and the Wendell H. Ford Parkway in Ohio County, just south of Owensboro. The park offers over 900 acres with utilities, infrastructure, and possible rail access.
-
Coleman Terminal, located on the east-side of Owensboro is a developable 92 acre site with river, rail, and major highway access. The terminal is owned by

the Owensboro Riverport Authority.
-
Skillman and Lewisport Sites in Hancock County 30 minutes east of Owensboro offer excellent river, rail, and highway access. The sites offer access to utilities and infrastructure.
- Owensboro Downtown the
newly developed Downtown
Owensboro Master Plan calls
for an additional 300,000
square feet of office space in downtown Owensboro over the next ten years with
robust incentives for redevelopment of existing property. Downtown Owensboro
currently has two “plug and play” locations available for back office and
professional service operations.
Transportation

Highway
Greater Owensboro is linked to the national transportation network through two limited
access highways, the Natcher and Audubon Parkways, which provide easy access to
nearby I-64 to the north and in the south to I-65 and I-24. Newly planned I-66 and I-69
corridors are 30 minutes to the west and south. Additionally, US 231, US 431, and US
60 provide excellent highway access to the region.
Interstate 69 will intersect the Audubon Parkway between Owensboro and Henderson at
approximately the three-mile marker, 20 minutes from Owensboro.
The I-64/ I-65 Corridor, currently under construction and set for completion in 2014,
provides a four lane limited access north-south expressway connection via the Natcher
Bridge to I-64 in 30 miles north in Indiana and I-65, located 50 miles to the south. Owensboro is the largest city and is located near the mid point along the Corridor.
Rail
A primary north-south line for CSX runs through the Greater Owensboro region,
providing ample combined river, rail, and highway access in the east in Hancock County
and throughout the Owensboro and Daviess County.
Water
The Owensboro Riverport Authority is a full-port, intermodal facility serving local, national, and international industry. Located at mile 759 on the Ohio River and 10 miles from the confluence of the Green River, the Owensboro Riverport is the largest riverport between Louisville and St. Louis and is a pivotal point for all river shipping in the Midwest. The Riverport also serves as a licensed warehouse as a delivery point of prime aluminum traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s COMEX Division aluminum futures contract. Owensboro Riverport is the only warehouse in the world serving contracts from the New York Mercantile Exchange and the London Metal Exchange. In addition to its geographical benefit, the port is a customs port-of-entry for receiving and shipping of foreign goods and maintains Foreign Trade Zone status.
Air
Commercial air service is available from the Owensboro-Daviess County Regional Airport. Construction has been completed on a runway expansion project that extended the main runway to 8,000 feet, the second longest in Kentucky. The Evansville Regional Airport, which offers commercial service to five additional major airports, is 45 minutes away. The Louisville International Airport and Nashville International Airport are two hours away. Additionally, two general aviation airfields and the planned Hancock County Airport serve the region for business and commuter flights.