In 2002, Incyte was created after a merger between Palo Alto, California–based Incyte Pharmaceuticals and Incyte Genomics of Delaware, and was spearheaded by a group of former DuPont Pharmaceuticals scientists as founders.
The deal to expand to downtown Wilmington almost didn’t happen.
Incyte was “pretty far down the road” on a different plan to invest in a sprawling suburban campus as an expansion in Alapocas, a site that already has three buildings totaling more than 500,000 square feet, said Mayor Purzycki.
But New Castle County officials rejected its plan for a 400,000-square-foot office and voted down its zoning permit. Incyte wrote off $5.6 million in costs related to its previous plan to purchase the Wilmington Friends School property for its proposed suburban expansion.
So state officials worked with the company in partnership with the city to consider other sites — like downtown. Incyte began meeting with the city in August 2023.
The city has invested tens of millions of dollars to improve its public spaces, community centers, encouraging building renovations and apartment projects.
“We’ve got more restaurants, night spots and hotels than the city has ever had before,” Purzycki said. “What we really need are people going to work every day.”
Incyte employees work in the office at least four days a week and there’s an optional remote workday for the fifth day, according to the company. In the next three years, Incyte expects to spend between $100 million to $200 million for buying the downtown buildings plus renovations and its planned suburban lab space retrofit, according to the company.
State economic development leaders negotiated the lion’s share of subsidies to entice Incyte to invest in Wilmington — nearly $15 million in total. Wilmington is expected to kick in some incentives too but that hasn’t yet been hashed out, Purzycki said.
“These investments are well worth it in the long run,” he said.
Now the Alapocas campus will be converted into lab space. The average salaries of workers relocating downtown is between $90,000 and $200,000.
The company is eligible for a jobs performance grant up to $9.1 million from Delaware’s Council on Development Finance, a graduated lab space grant up to $5.6 million from Delaware Strategic Fund — the money for which is contingent upon the company meeting its commitments. In total, the company could get $14.7 million in state subsidies.
“The grants provided historically for our growth and expansion, as well as those granted to us last week, allow companies like ours to succeed and be long-term contributors to the state and local community,” said Paula Swain, executive vice president and head of HR and facilities at Incyte. “The state, city, and county officials have been long-time supporters of innovative companies like ours and we are grateful for their continued support.”
Hervé Hoppenot, CEO of Incyte, said in a news release that the company is “grateful to the continued support of the state, the city and others.”