National Post

Google plans $1B expansion in New York

- MAE ANDERSON

Silicon Valley is becoming

Silicon Nation.

Google is planning a major expansion in New York City, announcing Monday it will spend more than US$1 billion on a new office complex that will allow the internet search giant to double the number of people it employs there.

The move follows similar steps by Amazon and Apple to set up operations well outside their home areas. Hungry for engineers and other employees, tech companies are aggressive­ly expanding beyond the Seattle-San Francisco corridor.

The Northeast is proving to be a good match, with its large concentrat­ion of highly educated young people from Boston to New York.

Google, based in Mountain View, Calif., will fashion a complex exceeding 1.7 million square feet along the Hudson River in the city’s West Village neighbourh­ood, Ruth Porat, senior vice-president and chief financial officer, said in a blog post.

Google opened its first office in New York nearly 20 years ago and now employs 7,000 people in the city. Its footprint has expanded continuous­ly. Google said this year that it would buy the Manhattan Chelsea Market building for US$2.4 billion and planned to lease more space at Pier 57, both along the Hudson about a mile north of the newly announced complex.

A month ago, Seattlebas­ed Amazon said it would set up new headquarte­rs in New York’s Long Island City neighbourh­ood and in Arlington, Va., creating upwards of 25,000 jobs in each location.

But it’s not just the East Coast that is benefiting from the expansion.

Apple, based in Cupertino, Calif., last week announced plans to build a US$1 billion campus in Austin, Texas, that will create at least 5,000 jobs.

And Google is expanding elsewhere, too. It plans to develop a 50-acre area into offices, homes, shops, restaurant­s and parks in San Jose, Calif., the heart of Silicon Valley. And this year it opened new offices and data centres in cities including Detroit; Boulder, Colo.; and Los Angeles, as well as in such states as Tennessee and Alabama.

The bidding for programmer­s is driving salaries higher, which in turn is catapultin­g the average prices of homes in many parts of the San Francisco Bay Area above US$1 million. Many high-tech workers are choosing to live elsewhere, forcing major tech employers to look in new places for the employees they need.

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