The Denver Post

NEIGHBORS DON’T WANT WAREHOUSE

- By John Aguilar

Amazon is proposing a new distributi­on hub in Arvada.

Amazon is eyeing Arvada for its next metroarea distributi­on hub, hoping to add another cog to a machine that’s worth more than $1.5 trillion, and buoyed by a global pandemic that’s generated a surge of online shopping.

Despite the potential for speedier service, a growing number of residents on the Denver suburb’s west side believe the location for a 112,000-square-foot warehouse and 1,500space parking lot filled with the company’s ubiquitous blue and gray delivery vans is the wrong place.

The 36-acre site — at the northeast corner of Indiana Street and West 66th Place — directly abuts the Maple Valley neighborho­od and the Ralston Creek trail, which is used by hundreds of residents every day and is a habitat for owls, hawks, deer, bobcats and coyotes.

“They’re just trying to shoehorn that developmen­t into that location,” said Gina Hallisey, who lives in Maple Valley. “To put something that invasive so close to homes and open space is incompatib­le.”

Hallisey worries about the impacts that an around-the-clock Amazon facility, with its vast illuminate­d parking lot and countless semi trucks and delivery vans moving in and out daily, will have on her quiet neighborho­od.

Amazon’s own traffic study estimates the site will generate 1,352 daily vehicle trips on weekdays. “We would support a less intrusive developmen­t that is more transition­al and mixed use,” said Hallisey, who serves as leader of the newly formed Protect Maple Valley Park community group.

Amazon spokeswoma­n D. Nikki Wheeler told The Denver Post last week that she was unaware of the neighbors’ concerns and planned to reach out.

“Amazon is proud of the investment­s it has made in Colorado,” Wheeler said. “We want to be good members of the community and good for the community.”

That won’t be easy, said J.J. Ament, CEO of the Metro Denver Economic Developmen­t Corporatio­n. Amazon, he said, likely will find it increasing­ly difficult going forward to identify places to build facilities that don’t impinge on fast-growing neighborho­ods in and around Denver. “Now that Amazon is vertically integratin­g into these spaces, they’re going to have to deal with the same challenges as their peers, like Walmart and Target, have had to deal with before them,” he said.

An enterprise that began as an online seller of books nearly 30 years ago, Amazon now has warehouses and distributi­on centers all over the country as part of an aggressive campaign to respond to consumers’ demand for more convenienc­e and faster delivery.

The company deftly tapped into — and helped lead — America’s shift to online shopping, and its growth has followed. According to a recent Associated Press story, Amazon hired more than 250,000 permanent full-time

and part-time workers in the third quarter of 2020, the most recent period it reported, and added an additional 100,000 in October, bringing its head count to 800,000 in the United States.

The company expects to take in $121 billion in sales during the fourth quarter of 2020, according to The Associated Press .

Convenienc­e at a cost?

Wheeler said Amazon employs 10,500 full-time and part-time workers in Colorado and has invested nearly $3 billion here, including wages and infrastruc­ture. She said it’s not yet known how many workers the Arvada facility would employ.

But the ease of shopping the company has ushered in for a generation of pointand-click consumers means more of an on-the-ground presence to get all those packages to doorsteps in as little time as possible.

“We want the convenienc­e of two-hour delivery,” Ament said. “And with that is the logistical challenge of how you physically accomplish that.”

Fights over Amazon’s expansion plans have occurred across the country, including Chicago, suburban Minneapoli­s and Gaithersbu­rg, Md. So far, the company largely has been spared pushback in metro Denver, and in 2018, the city and its suburbs made the final cut to be the home of Amazon’s second world headquarte­rs.

But Amazon’s Arvada plans differ from its existing hubs in the metro area because of how close the new facility would be to homes. Its distributi­on centers in Centennial and Denver are in the middle of industrial areas and far from neighborho­ods. And its giant robot-filled fulfillmen­t centers in Aurora and Thornton, which are each around 1 million square feet, are in dedicated industrial or retail zones along Interstate 70 and Interstate 25.

“This is a very different facility from those (fulfillmen­t centers),” said Ryan Stachelski, Arvada’s director of community and economic developmen­t. “Our understand­ing of this facility is that it is a distributi­on hub on a much smaller scale.”

He sympathize­s with neighbors worried about a 24/7 operation starting up in what is now a quiet field.

“It comes from having nothing there now — so having anything there is difficult,” he said.

“As neutral as we can”

Stachelski said the city will examine Amazon’s applicatio­n as it would any other.

“We try to be as neutral as we can through this process,” he said. “We want to make sure we’re not creating incompatib­le things in the community.”

Stachelski pointed out that the area Amazon is looking at is zoned for industrial use and is ringed by a dozen or so large light-industrial buildings, several of which have gone up in the past year or so.

But not all of the land that Amazon wants to acquire for its delivery facility is in the city’s limits — about 25 acres sit in unincorpor­ated Jefferson County.

The company not only will have to annex that into Arvada but also get it rezoned.

That’s where opponents, such as Hallisey, hope they can appeal to Arvada leaders to take a closer look. They aim to remind the city of its 2018 Arts and Culture Master Plan, which specifical­ly identifies the proposed Amazon site as a potential “centerpiec­e for arts and culture in the future.”

“Arvada touts connectivi­ty in their master plans and creating an Arvada Town Square Village would give this area that community gathering place,” Hallisey said.

Amazon’s applicatio­n is scheduled for a hearing before the city’s planning commission in March and then goes before the City Council in May. Mayor Marc Williams declined to comment on the proposal before its presentati­on to the council.

Maple Valley Homeowners Associatio­n President Tory Korthuis said he will be tracking the project as it goes through Arvada’s approvals process. He worries about how a busy Amazon facility might impact property values in a neighborho­od just a few hundred feet away.

“Who’s going to want to move into a house where all they’re looking at is a parking lot with lights?” he said.

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 ?? Andy Cross, The Denver Post ?? Gina Hallisey, leader of the newly formed Protect Maple Valley Park community group, stands on site Friday where an Amazon warehouse has been proposed near 67th Avenue and Fig Street in Arvada.
Andy Cross, The Denver Post Gina Hallisey, leader of the newly formed Protect Maple Valley Park community group, stands on site Friday where an Amazon warehouse has been proposed near 67th Avenue and Fig Street in Arvada.

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