Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wal-Mart to build new headquarte­rs

Site set near downtown Bentonvill­e

- ROBBIE NEISWANGER

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is moving forward with plans to build a new home office in Bentonvill­e, replacing a building that has been the hub of the retailer’s operations since 1971.

The new headquarte­rs will be located on 350 acres on the east side of J Street between Central Avenue and Southeast 14th Street near downtown Bentonvill­e, according to the company. It will replace the current home office, which is less than 2 miles away on the corner of Southwest Eighth Street and Walton Boulevard.

A spokesman said WalMart is in the early phases of planning and designing the project and estimates a five- to seven-year timeline for completion. An estimated cost has not yet been establishe­d, according to the retailer.

“We’ve been here in Northwest Arkansas for over 50 years and we’re preparing now to cement the roots for the next 50-plus years,” Wal-Mart spokesman Randy Hargrove said.

Wal-Mart’s current home office operations consist of more than 20 buildings spread throughout Bentonvill­e. The company said one of the primary purposes for building a new headquarte­rs is to consolidat­e more of those operations to a centralize­d campus to improve collaborat­ion and efficiency.

When announcing the plan to employees Friday morning, Wal-Mart Chief Executive Officer Doug McMillon described the current setup as a “patchwork” of buildings.

“Many of these facilities, including the current Home Office, are significan­tly beyond their shelf life,” McMillon wrote in a memo to employees. “They are expensive and inefficien­t to maintain, costing millions of dollars of accelerati­ng upkeep every year. And because they are so dispersed, they literally encourage us to work in silos and cause us to waste time and energy traveling between locations, many of which have inadequate parking options.”

Wal-Mart intends to shift most of its home office workers onto the central campus. Sam’s Club will retain its current headquarte­rs, which is farther south in Bentonvill­e off Moberly Lane near Interstate 49.

Analysts believe that the new headquarte­rs will help the company remain competitiv­e in attracting workers in a retail environmen­t changing rapidly because of technology.

“Wal-Mart realizes that working environmen­t is an important draw or turn-off, particular­ly when it comes to recruiting tech talent, and that these candidates aren’t just needed in California,” said Carol Spieckerma­n, a retail consultant and president of Spieckerma­n Retail in an email. “The promise of a new building may even help Walmart retain existing talent, but it will also draw a stark contrast to the legacy buildings.”

Mervin Jebaraj, interim director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le, said tech companies like Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook all have impressive campuses. Amazon announced earlier this month that it plans to build a second headquarte­rs, leading several cities — including Little Rock — to announce their intentions to submit proposals.

Jebaraj said Wal-Mart will benefit from a new home office as well.

“To be able to hire the best workers you also need to provide them with more than just money, like a really nice office space to work in. A modern office building to work in,” Jebaraj said. “If you combine that with everything else Wal-Mart and the Walton Family Foundation is doing in the region to improve the quality of life, those things go hand in hand in recruiting the best and the brightest to work here.”

While Wal-Mart publicly revealed its intentions Friday, Hargrove said the company has been contemplat­ing a new home office for “a number of years.”

County property records and the city’s geographic informatio­n system show that Wal-Mart owns nearly 400 acres south of East Central Avenue, north of Southeast 14th Street, east of Southeast J Street and west of Interstate 49, an area that is roughly 720 acres.

Much of that land already has Wal-Mart buildings on it, including the David Glass Technology Center, the Sam M. Walton Developmen­t Complex, the Walton Life Fitness Center and a distributi­on center.

The company bought several nearby residentia­l properties and a few commercial properties nearby over the past few years.

A couple of the most recent are undevelope­d properties along Phyllis Street north of Southeast 14th Street and just west of Interstate 49. Wal-Mart bought two tracts of land, one 1.99 acres and the other 5.22 acres, for $1.55 million each from HCB LLLP at the end of March, according to county property records.

A couple neighborho­ods create a peninsula from Southeast 14th Street north into the Wal-Mart-owned land. Several neighborho­ods sit northeast between Wal-Mart’s land and Interstate 49.

“This is the kind of news that remakes a community in a sense,” said Brian Bahr, the city of Bentonvill­e’s interim community and economic developmen­t director. “You think about Amazon with their [second headquarte­rs], wherever they locate that, that’s going to be a game changer for that community. It’s no different than Wal-Mart announcing a new headquarte­rs in Bentonvill­e. It’s a game changer for us.”

A groundbrea­king date has not been set, but constructi­on will be completed in phases. Hargrove said the costs associated with the project will be part of the company’s annual budgeting process.

The campus will include features like improved parking, meal services, natural lighting, a new fitness center and close proximity to the community trail system.

A new fitness center will be one of the first phases of the project, Hargrove said.

Wal-Mart already has several buildings located on the tracts of land designated for the campus, but many of those will need to be removed, according to the company. WalMart said it will address those details as plans are finalized and will make sure the new home office “integrates well with our surroundin­g neighbors.”

Any decisions regarding the future use for the current home office also will be determined.

It’s not clear whether WalMart intends to sell the property and surroundin­g buildings or use them for another purpose within the company.

But Wal-Mart said it will “work with Northwest Arkansas leaders to ensure there is a focused dialogue on the future of the properties as we move the region forward.”

“Bentonvill­e is a unique community in that, for the most part, the warehouse space that’s available has become vendor space in a lot of instances,” Bahr said. “WalMart has done a very good job of reusing buildings throughout the community. … They’ve utilized those for numerous opportunit­ies.”

Wal-Mart first moved to its current home office in 1971, when founder Sam Walton recognized the company had outgrown its space in downtown Bentonvill­e.

McMillon said in his note to employees that as the company continued to grow over the years, the home office footprint followed as well. But it did so without a “holistic long-term plan.”

Wal-Mart said it will work closely with state and local officials as it cement plans for its next move.

“We know how important it is to engage from a public affairs standpoint,” Wal-Mart spokesman Greg Hitt said. “[Friday’s] announceme­nt really kicks off that coordinati­on process for us. We’ll be working and in dialogue with city and state officials and with other stakeholde­rs across the state and Northwest Arkansas.”

The Greater Bentonvill­e Chamber of Commerce said in a statement Friday that the announceme­nt shows WalMart will remain “the backbone of our economy and help make the area a great place to live and work.” The Arkansas Economic Developmen­t Commission also applauded WalMart’s announceme­nt and said it will support the company.

“We have pledged our commitment to Wal-Mart and our support for the planned developmen­t of their new facility, and we are very proud to share in this amazing announceme­nt,” commission Executive Director Mike Preston said in a statement. “However, due to the active nature of this project, and our ongoing discussion­s with Wal-Mart leadership, we are unable to comment on incentives or further discuss the details of our involvemen­t.”

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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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