Monday, May 5, 2025

The Westinghouse Building

The plant in its idle days (2010). It used more land than it sat on. Maybe they had plans for further expansion once.

Long before even the Southwest Parkway overpass was built, around 1980, Westinghouse Electric Corporation purchased a large 50-acre site off of the "East Bypass" and on it, opened a plant for their Westinghouse Electronic Systems division, employing just under 500 people, and featuring amenities such as a cafeteria, an infirmary, and even a racquetball court. This plant opened around 1983-1984.

Westinghouse began to scale down the plant's employee count in the early 1990s, starting a wave of layoffs that would ultimately gut the facility. In 1995, corporate at Westinghouse made a major purchase that would change the company—CBS Incorporated, which would become the main focus of the company. It would rename to CBS Corporation in 1997 and divest most of its remaining assets until it merged with CBS's former spin-off Viacom in 2000.1

In 1996, Westinghouse Electronic Systems (as a division) was sold to Northrop Grumman, and the College Station plant went with it, but its best years were behind it. When Northrup Grumman shut down the plant in 1999 (just three years after buying Westinghouse Electronic Systems), it had only 100 employees down from a peak of 470 when Westinghouse was running it in the 1980s and early 1990s before the layoffs. For a period of about 10 years, the facility sat vacant. In 2005, I remember hearing the news about some vandalism of the facility, but I can't find an article for it.

In early 2009, Lynntech Inc., a local firm, purchased the site for their consolidated headquarters. Lynntech's idea was that they would use some of the space, and develop the rest of the space, including the area behind and around the facility. One of maps from the defunct AbouTown Press had a map of what the whole thing would look like when filled out (it would've had more buildings and facilities, though it did not have an extension of Appomattox, at least from what I remember), though I no longer have it.

From the start, it did not go well. The purchase was finalized in March 2009 but they could not move into the building until early 2010 (don't ask me why it has the year 2012 on the article). A biofuel company was scheduled to move in2 but I can't find proof of that ever went through.

By 2014, The Science Park hadn't even filled the original building, much less build out anything on the massive 53-acre campus it sat in. However, a new proposal would completely fill the facility when Blinn announced they were considering the building for a campus expansion. The idea faced heavy resistance from the nearby Raintree subdivision residents on traffic noise3; the highway was essentially one-way in, one-way out, and didn't nearly have the outflow capabilities of the Villa Maria Blinn campus. Within a few months, Blinn dropped their plans and would continue to focus in Bryan.4

The next stage in the life of the campus would come in 2016 when Oldham Goodwin acquired the campus and renamed it to Providence Park. The big difference here was that the acreage was hybridized for commercial opportunities, and soon after, a good part of the parking lot of the facility was removed for the construction of a new Academy Sports + Outdoors store, moving from their old store at Horse Haven Lane. Additionally, one part of the building was removed near the front (probably the old cafeteria) and Northrup-Grumman Road, a small access road off of the highway that provided access to the back of the facility (and another access to the parking lot of St. Thomas next door), was largely rebuilt and renamed as Providence Road (though St. Thomas put up a gate that possibly opens on Sundays but it's closed most of the time).

The Westinghouse building has a common corridor to access the office tenants inside. (Photo by author, 1/2020).

New parking was built directly in front of the what is now known as "The Westinghouse Building" at 2501 Earl Rudder Freeway to replace the parking lost to Academy. Lynntech and a few other tenants still occupy the site. I haven't made anything about the current Academy—probably not since it's very much still there (what am I supposed to say about it?) nor the La-Z-Boy store that opened earlier this year...or VeraBank...but I do have something on the short-lived Varsity Grillhouse which you can read about here.

1. The drama between CBS, Viacom, and their on-and-off relationship is mildly interesting, but you can read about it elsewhere. Up until 2021 when the newly re-merged ViacomCBS (since renamed Paramount Global) sold the trademark back to former Westinghouse division Westinghouse Electric Company, they still owned the trademark through a licensing subsidiary.
2. If that link is slow, also check this one.
3. Raintree residents never did like the Westinghouse idea from day one. I'm not sure what the compromise was, or if the questions they had were just not applicable to what Westinghouse was doing.
4. After the Westinghouse plan was abandoned, Blinn settled on the northwest corner of Leonard Road and North Harvey Mitchell Parkway. This was ultimately abandoned when Texas A&M announced the "RELLIS" campus and ultimately the second Blinn campus was moved there.
5. Before around 2000, the address was 7807 East Bypass.