Helen Wang heads house after her side hurry, which is making pots of spicy meat soup and pork noodles for Chinese colleagues who are thirsty for a taste of home, comes to work at the new device factory looming over the Arizona desert. When the first laborers began landing on the north edge of Phoenix two years ago to function at a chip manufacturer run by the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, there were hardly any Asian foods or Chinese restaurants nearby. Since then, the employees and their families have transformed a sparsely populated strip mall sprawl into a small Taipei. Taquerias and hammer shops are becoming a location for Chinese firms. Ms. Wang and Japanese cooks are bringing meals to the parking lot of the device factory. Chinese sauces and pasta are now available in supermarkets. 282 Chinese students are enrolled in daycare centers and schools this time, and the sound of Mandarin floats through them. President Biden’s campaign to boost sophisticated device production in the United States includes a sizable investment that will bring thousands of workers and their families to the region. Through the CHIPS and Science Act, the business, known as TSMC, has committed$ 65 billion to the project and will soon receive$ 6.6 billion in grants. Heather Wang, a worker at the TSMC flower, is preparing a side rush for her Taiwanese coworkers who want a taste of home. We are having difficulty retrieving the article’s information. In your browser’s settings, choose enable JavaScript. Thank you for your patience while we verify exposure. If you are in Audience mode please leave and log into your Times accounts, or listen for all of The Times. Thank you for your patience while we verify exposure. Now a subscription? Register in. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.