National Post

CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR

SEATTLE’S AMAZON STORY IS TEACHABLE

- neil PowerS

When the Great Recession hit Seattle in 2008, the region was better known for Boeing jets, Starbucks coffee and Microsoft programmer­s than it was for a rapidly growing online retailer called Amazon.com.

But that was about to change. As unemployme­nt soared above 10 per cent, downtown offices vacancies hit 20 per cent and home values plunged, a plan to consolidat­e Amazon’s then-4,000 employees in a downtown campus was already taking shape.

Fast forward a decade and Amazon has 40,000 employees in the Seattle region, most of them in 37 buildings clustered in a district known as South Lake Union and adjacent downtown neighbourh­oods.

The company says it has added US$38 billion to the Seattle area economy from 2010 to 2016, and that 53,000 additional jobs have been created as a result of its presence.

Now Amazon has cities across North America, including Toronto, vying to host a second headquarte­rs — dubbed HQ2 — one that Amazon says will bring “as many as 50,000 high-paying jobs” and in which it expects “to invest over US$5 billion.”

But while Seattle has reaped massive benefits from Amazon’s growth into one of the world’s biggest companies — and the South Lake Union campus has been heralded as a model of urban revitaliza­tion — there have also been costs, which HQ2 hopefuls such as Toronto would be wise to keep in mind.

“The biggest single thing on the mind of most Seattleite­s … is the way the city has become unaffordab­le,” says David Rolf, a prominent Washington State union leader who represents long-term care workers.

Seattle is now rated the seventh most-expensive city in the U.S. by the Cost of Living Index, a measure put out by the non-profit Center for Regional Economic Competitiv­eness that looks at housing, utilities, health care, groceries, transporta­tion and miscellane­ous goods and services.

Online realtor Zillow says the cost of an average home has nearly doubled to $722,000 in the past five years and the region’s median housing rent of $2,203 puts it in the Top 10 among U.S. cities.

Those sky-high housing prices have left Seattle with the nation’s third-largest homeless population, estimated by a recent count at 11,643 people.

“Despite the economic prosperity … in part because of it, Seattle is facing a homelessne­ss crisis of unpreceden­ted proportion­s,” Ben Noble, the city’s budget director, wrote in the city’s 2018 budget.

The duelling legacies of Amazon’s first headquarte­rs would have been almost inconceiva­ble when the seeds of Seattle’s boom were being sown.

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos started selling books out of his garage in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue in 1994.

In 1995, Amazon.com opened with a website advertisin­g itself as “Earth’s Biggest Book Store.” Within a month it was selling books in every U.S. state and in 45 countries.

By the early 2000s, as Amazon continued to grow, a real estate company called Vulcan, controlled by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen, had acquired 60 acres in the South Lake Union area.

Located north of downtown, South Lake Union was a sleepy 359-acre neighbourh­ood with about a thousand residents, some parking lots, light industrial sites and shops. One of the busiest places on Sunday mornings was Denny’s restaurant.

Allen’s vision was to transform the area into a centre for biotech, with commercial and residentia­l sections mixed in.

By 2007, however, Vulcan had shifted gears and was devising a plan to develop a headquarte­rs for Amazon, which had by then experience­d phenomenal growth but had its employees scattered in offices across the city.

Ten new buildings were built, with about 1.7 million square feet of office space, and the Amazon campus — full of staff sometimes known as Amazonians — was born.

Amazon’s office space in South Lake Union and adjacent neighbourh­oods has since blossomed to more than 11 million square feet, greater than the combined office space of the city’s next 40 largest employers.

As vice-president of Vulcan Real Estate, Ada Healey led the effort to transform South Lake Union, including developing Amazon’s headquarte­rs.

Though she says there are some problems that need to be addressed, Healey stresses the benefits Seattle has reaped.

“While people are quick to lament the ‘growing pains’ of developmen­t, there’s more opportunit­y for cities that take a smart, strategic and forward-looking approach, as we’ve see in Seattle from job creation to the revitaliza­tion of overlooked neighbourh­oods,” Healey says.

She acknowledg­es that better transporta­tion planning — Seattle has some of the worst traffic congestion in the U.S., and the fastest growing transit ridership — is a must. “Transit and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture planning is critical and must address the future needs of a city, not its current conditions,” Healey says.

To better prepare for growth, Healey wants city planners and real estate developers to think “two steps ahead” in terms of the region’s needs.

Seattle is moving in that direction, but it does not come cheap.

In 2016, voters approved a US$54 billion plan to expand light rail, bus and rail transporta­tion.

The city has also invested about $675 million in South Lake Union infrastruc­ture in recent years, on power distributi­on, a streetcar system, parks, traffic mitigation and roads.

Solutions for housing may be harder to come by.

Rachael Myers, a Seattlebas­ed social housing expert and director of the Washington State Low Income Housing Alliance, worries that the influx of highly paid tech workers will continue to lead to big rent increases.

“It’s really clear, there’s a direct correlatio­n between rents rising and homelessne­ss increasing,” Myers says. “For people who are hanging on (to housing) … moving around regularly they’re doubling and tripling up in ways that aren’t necessaril­y healthy or conducive to creating a good living environmen­t.”

Labour leader Rolf wants to see housing for the “missing middle” to address a growing fear that retirees, renters and young people may be pushed out of the city.

Whether Amazon itself has done enough to directly help address issues the city is facing is another question.

Lisa Herbold, one of Seattle’s nine city councillor­s, wants companies such as Amazon to go beyond philanthro­py and show leadership on such issues.

“Bottom line is we need more revenue,” she said. “You can’t manage growth without the funding.”

For its part, Amazon says it has been ramping up its contributi­ons to the community.

Spokespers­on Sam Kennedy sent the Financial Post a list of its efforts, including that “Amazon has committed more than $30 million dollars to support homeless families, STEM (science, technology, engineerin­g and math) education, and job training programs in Seattle.”

Despite the city’s issues, many are reluctant to put too much of the blame at Amazon’s door.

“Amazon grew rapidly and exacerbate­d problems that were already present,” says University of Washington professor Margaret O’Mara, a former White House policy staff who teaches about hightech economies.

Amazon has said it expects to make a decision on HQ2 sometime in 2018.

Besides Toronto, there are 19 U.S. cities on the shortlist, with Austin, Texas, and either Washington, D.C., or nearby Northern Virginia perceived by many as the leading candidates.

Ken Greenberg, a Toronto based urban designer-architect and former Director of Urban Design and Architectu­re at the City of Toronto, says the cities in the running should be cautious about what they are getting themselves into.

“This has become a lottery where people think they’re just going to win an enormous amount of money and that having this population coming in, it’s going to be an unmitigate­d good for the city,” Greenberg said.

That mindset has led some contenders to pull out all the stops — New Jersey, for example, has offered as much as $7 billion in tax breaks to Amazon if HQ2 locates in Newark.

Toronto has not offered direct financial incentives, but it is likely the city would need to make infrastruc­ture and transporta­tion investment­s to handle a up to 50,000 Amazon employees and those of related companies.

Understand­ing Amazon’s other “asks” and “looking with open eyes what the impacts are likely to be” are musts, Greenberg says.

Ultimately, the decision may come down to just what is most important to Amazon: perks, proximity to the powers that be in Washington, or the highly skilled workforce needed to build on the company’s growth.

Trying to figure that out, as the University of Washington’s O’Mara puts it, is something of a mug’s game.

“No one can read the mind of Jeff Bezos.”

FACING A HOMELESSNE­SS CRISIS OF (HISTORIC) PROPORTION­S.

 ?? MIKE KANE / BLOOMBERG ?? Amazon.com Inc.’s Seattle campus has injected $38 billion to the city’s economy from 2010 to 2016, the company says, but has incurred costs in the way of affordabil­ity, which HQ2 hopefuls such as Toronto would be wise to keep in mind.
MIKE KANE / BLOOMBERG Amazon.com Inc.’s Seattle campus has injected $38 billion to the city’s economy from 2010 to 2016, the company says, but has incurred costs in the way of affordabil­ity, which HQ2 hopefuls such as Toronto would be wise to keep in mind.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada