Biotech Firm Moves HQ From San Diego to Cincinnati

The new office positions the company closer to its manufacturing campus.

Biotech and pharmaceutical manufacturer Resilience is relocating its corporate headquarters from San Diego to 10901 Kenwood Road in Blue Ash, Ohio, a suburb of Cincinnati. The company is leasing the property and investing $100 million in the facility, with an option to purchase it later.

Beyond serving as Resilience’s new headquarters, the Blue Ash facility will support the company’s sterile injectable operations. The 450,000-square-foot site will house drug product packaging and supply functions, including visual inspection, device assembly, packaging, labeling and cold-storage warehousing. Resilience expects to add approximately 200 jobs at the facility.


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The headquarters move positions Resilience near its 608,323-square-foot West Chester manufacturing campus at 8814 and 8874 Trade Port Drive. Resilience acquired the former AstraZeneca facility for $212 million in 2023, according to Yardi Matrix.

Also at the West Chester facility, Resilience is investing in a new Groninger multi-purpose injectable fill/finish line. This will allow the company to expand its manufacturing capacity and provide greater flexibility for multiple injectable products and formats.

This announcement is building on Resilience’s expansion in Ohio. In March 2025, the company and JobsOhio announced additional investments in device assembly and packaging operations in Blue Ash.

Blue Ash headquarters has access to interstates 71 and 275 with connections to Cincinnati. The Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport is approximately 35 miles away.

Corporate investment continues in Cincinnati

The Greater Cincinnati area continues to attract corporate investment and expansion activity. According to Cushman & Wakefield, the region ranked among the top 10 large U.S. metropolitan areas for economic development projects, with 110 underway. In the first quarter of 2026, Blue Ash recorded 52,982 square feet of positive net absorption.

Across the larger metro, several companies have relocated their headquarters to the market. In December, Massachusetts-based SencorpWhite, a manufacturing firm, announced it was relocating to Hamilton, Ohio. The company will be adding 230 jobs at the site over the next seven years, according to the Cincinnati Business Courier.

Last April, Skanska brought online Cincinnati Public Radio’s new headquarters, a $32 million project that became the city’s first mass timber building.