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NEW ALBANY, Ohio (WCMH) – Intel’s massive computer chip factory, originally scheduled to open this year, has been delayed again, this time to the next decade. According to a release from Intel ...
And in the decades since, New Albany has grown into one of the wealthiest places in Ohio, an 11,000-resident hub for major companies with a $20 billion Intel computer chip campus on the way.
The semiconductor company has announced what will be the 'largest silicon manufacturing location on the planet' in New Albany, Ohio, fighting the chip shortage stateside.
NEW ALBANY, Ohio — Intel Corp. has once again pushed back the expected opening for its semiconductor project in central Ohio. The struggling chipmaker announced Friday that construction on the ...
On Thursday, Intel released both reports and reaffirmed its commitment to build Intel Foundry, the semiconductor manufacturing division of the company that oversees the project underway in New Albany.
Two years after the New Albany project broke ground, some of the luster has worn off Intel's massive semiconductor fab in Licking County.
Intel has told the state it spent $1.5 billion so far on its $20 billion promise to build two factories in Licking County and hired 69 Ohio workers.
The partnership, which the companies describe as a multi-year, multi-billion-dollar co-investment, comes as Intel continues to build out its $28 billion chip manufacturing complex in New Albany.
The $28 billion semiconductor project in central Ohio was originally scheduled to begin operations in 2025.
Completion of Intel's $28 billion project in Licking County appears to have been pushed back again as federal aid is slow to come.