Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bid partially unveiled

Amazon HQ proposal included 84 acres downtown, Cashman

- By Wade Tyler Millward Las Vegas Review-journal

To persuade Amazon to open its second headquarte­rs in the Las Vegas area, state and local government­s offered 84 acres of land in downtown Las Vegas that included some wellknown landmarks.

The proposal would have let the e-commerce giant replace the 10,000seat, 98,000-square-foot Cashman Center exhibit hall and Cashman Field, home to the Las Vegas 51s and the Las Vegas Lights FC soccer team, with a corporate campus that could have included an auditorium, food hall, theater and fitness center.

BID

In place of the Natural History Museum and Heritage Park, there could have been a hotel and conference center.

The land for the Las Vegas Library, just south of a mortuary, could have become a research and developmen­t showcase plaza with groundfloo­r showrooms.

All this and more is outlined in nine pages released to the Las Vegas Review-journal on Thursday from a proposal at least 113 pages in length.

Records requested

Representa­tives of the project first denied the Review-journal’s request for the full proposal in October, saying it includes proprietar­y informatio­n.

The release Thursday was in response to a records release request for a redacted version of the project.

None of the nine pages are redacted. It was not immediatel­y clear what was on the at least 104 pages not given to the Review-journal. It was also not immediatel­y clear how many sites, including downtown Las Vegas, local government­s proposed to Amazon.

The agencies behind the effort to recruit Amazon include the Las Vegas Global Economic Alliance, the Governor’s Office of Economic Developmen­t, Clark County and cities of Las Vegas, Henderson and North Las Vegas.

Agency representa­tives did not return requests for comments on the proposal.

An invoice obtained by the Review-journal shows the GOED spent $31,250 on research, management services and video promotion.

Cashman rejected again

Las Vegas city officials have long had high hopes for the Cashman site. Before pitching it to Amazon, city officials touted it as a potential new home for the Raiders. The site didn’t make the Raiders’ short list. They instead looked to the south end of the Strip.

Though the Lights play in Cashman Field, the city’s lease agreement with the United Soccer League team allows the city to terminate it if officials lock in a definitive agreement with a major league team or a developer for another use.

The city mothballed the Cashman Center convention facilities at the endoflasty­ear.

The proposal said Amazon would get the 84 acres for free if it met criteria not specified in the available pages of the proposal.

Had Las Vegas been chosen, officials would have negotiated performanc­e conditions, or clawbacks, giving the city recourse if the company didn’t create the economic impact and jobs it promised, Las Vegas City Manager Scott Adams said.

“I’ve never looked at incentives as the reason a company moves somewhere,” Adams said. “They’re the tiebreaker­s.”

Cashman was one of multiple sites included in the regional proposal, Adams said.

The other sites weren’t included in the nine pages released Thursday.

The city of Las Vegas’ downtown master plan envisions Cashman becoming a mixed-use developmen­t, potentiall­y with a sports complex as the centerpiec­e. The city is still working in that direction, Adams said.

“I don’t look at us as being in the real estate business,” he said. “I look at us as being in the redevelopm­ent business.”

The proposal property east of Las Vegas Boulevard, which includes Cashman Field and Cashman Center, has an assessed value of about

$12 million, according to county records.

The property west of Las Vegas Boulevard, including the library, has an assessed value of about $2 million, according to county records.

Property at Las Vegas Boulevard and Stewart Avenue, across the street from the headquarte­rs of Zappos, an e-commerce company owned by Amazon, was also part of the proposal.

In the Amazon proposal, the city touted its smart city efforts in the downtown Innovation District, its diversity and the city drawing 100 percent of its power for city facilities from renewable energy sources.

Hsieh property mentioned

When Amazon announced it would accept bids from cities to win the location of a headquarte­rs outside its base in Seattle, the company promised 50,000 new full-time employees and $5 billion in capital expenditur­es to build the so-called HQ2.

The Las Vegas proposal said the 84 acres for Amazon could expand to 144 acres “utilizing the land holdings of Downtown Project.”

The Downtown Project is a downtown revitaliza­tion effort from Zappos CEO Tony Hsieh. A representa­tive of the Downtown Project referred questions to Zappos. Representa­tives of Zappos could not be reached for comment.

Amazon had already made a noticeable investment in its Las Vegas Valley presence with a new fulfillmen­t center that opened in August. Tax incentives helped recruit a local presence for the company.

Nevada’s attempt to lure Amazon included social media campaigns and a nearly five-minute promotiona­l video with scenes of the Strip and references to the area healing after the Oct. 1 shooting.

In January, Amazon released a list of places it was considerin­g for its second headquarte­rs. Las Vegas didn’t make the list, and there are now 20 finalists.

Contact Wade Tyler Millward at wmillward@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-4602. Follow @ wademillwa­rd on Twitter. Reviewjour­nal writers Jamie Munks and Nicole Raz contribute­d to this report.

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Jeff Bezos

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