Houston Chronicle

Houston pitches ‘Innovation Corridor’ as prime spot for Amazon’s second home

Area between downtown, Med Center includes rail line, notable institutio­ns

- By Collin Eaton

Houston leaders hope to entice Amazon with a spot somewhere within the four-mile stretch of the Metro rail line that runs from downtown to the Texas Medical Center, an area they’re calling the Innovation Corridor — and the city’s best shot at winning the Seattle tech giant’s $5 billion second headquarte­rs.

The rail line cuts through a part of Houston that includes some of the city’s largest companies and most prominent health care institutio­ns, as well as Rice University, Hermann Park, the Museum District, Houston Community College, NRG Park and the collection of bars, restaurant­s and apartment complexes in trendy Midtown, according to a document outlining Houston’s confidenti­al proposal.

City officials won’t say exactly where they want Amazon to plant a campus that could grow to more than 8 million square feet and house 50,000 highpaying jobs. But they have proposed multiple sites within the corridor, a slice of Houston that connects

the city’s intellectu­al and cultural assets in the heart of its ethnically diverse population and bustling business hub.

“What’s remarkable is how concentrat­ed all of this is in a fourmile-long area,” said Bob Harvey, president and CEO of the Greater Houston Partnershi­p, the group behind Houston’s bid for Amazon. “Innovation Corridor seems to fit. It’s just like, wow, this is what Amazon is looking for.”

But Houston’s proposal is competing with more than 230 bids that Amazon has collected from major cities in the United States, Mexico and Canada. In addition, Houston would have to overcome long odds to beat its rivals, including Austin, which could offer the company the same state-backed incentives, but also a vastly more vibrant technology sector from which to draw workers and ideas.

And while Houston’s nascent technology sector has grown in recent years, companies like Apple, Google, Facebook and Samsung have brought hundreds of jobs to Austin, helping to build the critical mass of companies, skilled workers, entreprene­urs and capital that define innovation centers. Austin recently ranked No. 1 on a list of major U.S. cities in meeting Amazon’s criteria, according to economic research firm Moody’s Analytics. Houston came in at No. 52, its prospects hurt by low mass transit ridership across large swaths of the city, and quality of life factors including a higher crime rate and fewer restaurant and entertainm­ent options per capita.

If the two Texas cities were competing for the next headquarte­rs of General Electric, the massive industrial conglomera­te that acquired Houston oil field service company Baker Hughes this summer, then Houston and its vast network of energy companies would have the edge over Austin, said Praveen Kumar, a finance professor at the University of Houston.

“Houston has a lot to offer,” Kumar said, “but the kind of company Amazon is has an emphasis on attracting human capital. Houston just doesn’t stack up the same way.”

But local leaders say the region’s concentrat­ion of traditiona­l companies could be a selling point, providing Amazon, which prides itself as a disruptor that shakes up establishe­d industries, the chance to collaborat­e on technology with a vast network of energy, health care, manufactur­ing, logistics and space sectors here. CEO Jeff Bezos and his company could get the opportunit­y to tackle some of the biggest modern challenges, such as the sustainabi­lity of the world’s energy resources and climate change.

“What disruptors need is access to the traditiona­l industry model and the problems it creates that they can’t imagine or conceive of from the outside,” Harvey said. “People might say what interest would Amazon have in oil and gas, but energy is the issue of the day.”

Local leaders have given Amazon its choice of undisclose­d sites within the so-called Innovation Corridor, which, according to the document drafted by the Greater Houston Partnershi­p, offers close access to two internatio­nal airports, three interstate­s, 3 million workers, plus key game changers in business and an unparallel­ed array of amenities.

The document’s 32 bullet points highlighte­d the nearly 100,000 people who work in technology-related fields as well as the region’s low taxes, low cost of living, reasonable housing prices and eclectic neighborho­ods and restaurant­s.

In particular, the document highlighte­d the city’s racial and ethnic diversity, which, Harvey argued, should appeal to a company that wants to attract millennial workers to a tech industry that has come under fire for its ethnic uniformity, particular­ly in Silicon Valley.

“As Amazon seeks to diversify its ranks at the executive, manager and profession­al levels, there is no better place to locate than in Houston,” city leaders said.

The Seattle tech giant’s proposed campus, of course, would be an economic boon for any American city. But win or lose, Houston’s leaders have said fighting for Amazon has challenged planners and developers to think about the future of the city and region, and say the bid may well become the catalyst for the kind of innovation ecosystem that pushes the local economy into new directions to underpin its long-term prosperity. If so, that would be welcome in a city that has harnessed innovation­s in oil and gas developmen­t to dominate the U.S. energy industry, but lacks a robust technology sector.

“The industrial-only town isn’t where the decisions get made,” said Paul Hobby, founding partner at Houston private equity firm Genesis Park. “The kings of medicine won’t be life science guys. They’ll be IT guys.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? Houston’s proposal to house Amazon’s second headquarte­rs is competing with more than 230 bids that Amazon has collected from major cities in the United States, Mexico and Canada. In addition, Houston would have to overcome long odds to beat its rivals,...
Associated Press Houston’s proposal to house Amazon’s second headquarte­rs is competing with more than 230 bids that Amazon has collected from major cities in the United States, Mexico and Canada. In addition, Houston would have to overcome long odds to beat its rivals,...

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