The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Ga. ‘crowdsourc­ing’ sites for Amazon hub

State creates web site to help Atlanta compete for new headquarte­rs.

- By J. Scott Trubey

Got 100 acres or more to sell? Is it near a bus or MARTA rail line, and within 45 minutes of Hartsfield-Jackson Internatio­nal Airport?

If the answers are yes to those questions, the Georgia Department of Economic Developmen­t wants to hear from you. The state’s top recruiting agency has set up a web page to essentiall­y crowdsourc­e locations to pitch to e-commerce giant Amazon as part of the state’s pitch for what the company calls HQ2, a new corporate hub where Amazon says it’ll one day house 50,000 jobs.

Atlanta is competing with just about every other large metropolit­an area in North America for the new second headquarte­rs. The project could potentiall­y total more than 8 million square feet of office space, and Amazon has said its new jobs would pay an average of more than $100,000 a year.

“Amazon is performing a competitiv­e site selection process and is considerin­g metro regions in North America for its second corporate headquarte­rs,” the web page says. “If you feel like your community or property meets or exceeds the needs of the project described in the RFP (request for proposals), and have a site to submit — please fill out this form and submit to the Georgia Department of Economic Developmen­t (GDEcD) for considerat­ion.”

Headquarte­rs recruiting is often a secretive business, and the state economic developmen­t team declined to comment on the web page.

But the web page is a novel approach by the state to find a broader pool of potential sites around the metro area that recruiters might not have considered.

The form also asks about fiber internet capabiliti­es, cellular service, whether it’s within 2 miles of a major highway and if there’s room for expansion on the property or nearby to 8 million square feet of office space. Those requiremen­ts are contained in Amazon’s RFP.

Amazon triggered what many observers expect to be a bidding war Sept. 7 when it outlined its demands: a metro area of 1 million or more people, a “business-friendly environmen­t” with links to internatio­nal airports, a high quality of living and transit.

Some have equated the hunt for HQ2 with a bid for an Olympic Games, except here the prize isn’t a few summer weeks of tourists and internatio­nal attention, but jobs and investment from one of the world’s best-known companies.

Most economic analysts have Atlanta among the potential finalists. The list of likely sites that could house the mammoth campus include downtown Atlanta’s Gulch, the former General Motors plant in Doraville, Fort McPher-

son south of downtown and even the High Street site near Perimeter Mall in Dunwoody.

The city of Atlanta has other candidates, including several sites along the Beltline and the project backed by developmen­t firm Carter in the parking lots north of the former Turner Field.

The state and city could also assemble land on the city’s Westside.

Georgia Tech, meanwhile, has plans for substantia­l redevelopm­ent of its Technology Enterprise Park, where Amazon might make a good fit.

Bids are due Oct. 19, and the company will decide by next year.

 ?? AJC.COM SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@ ?? The site of the former General Motors plant in Doraville is one of several locations the state hopes could woo Amazon to build its giant ‘HQ2’ campus in the Atlanta area. Others include Fort McPherson and downtown’s Gulch district. Developmen­t experts...
AJC.COM SCOTT TRUBEY / STRUBEY@ The site of the former General Motors plant in Doraville is one of several locations the state hopes could woo Amazon to build its giant ‘HQ2’ campus in the Atlanta area. Others include Fort McPherson and downtown’s Gulch district. Developmen­t experts...

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