Wolfspeed (NYSE: WOLF), the semiconductor manufacturer building a $5 billion facility in Chatham County, now has a neighbor at one of the county’s megasites.
Innovative Construction Group, which was acquired by national homebuilder PulteGroup (NYSE: PHM) in 2020, announced in April it is investing roughly $40 million in operations in Siler City. It turns out they will build at the 1,800-acre Chatham-Siler City Advanced Manufacturing (CAM) Site, which is owned by a pair of Triad investors.
D.H. Griffin and Tim Booras, president of Freedom Beverage Co. of Greensboro formed a partnership in 2005, combining their land to form what would become the CAM property, an 1802-acre megasite created to lure a major manufacturer. While D.H. Griffin, a demolition, construction and real estate giant, bought into the vision for the megasite nearly two decades ago, leadership of the family enterprises has since transitioned to son David Griffin.
Booras and Griffin sold 445 acres to Durham-based Wolfspeed for more than $15.2 million last March. The purchase price came to about $34,200 an acre.
With Innovative Construction Group occupying 45 acres and Wolfspeed on 445 acres, the CAM site still has 1,300 acres available.
And that land is “better positioned now as a megasite than than at any time in the past,” Brian Hall, president for real estate at Samet Corp., told TBJ last year. Samet is marketing the property.
Triad Business Journal









