The Borneo Post

Queens neighbourh­ood wary of Amazon coming to town

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NEW YORK: New York’s Long Island City, where Amazon is tipped to set up a new home, is a neighbourh­ood in flux – a constructi­on site of warehouses and skyscraper­s where some fear the online retail giant will only make everything worse.

While nothing has been announced officially, The New York Times has reported that Amazon, which is outgrowing its headquarte­rs in Seattle, has finally found the answer to its year-long search for a second base.

The plan appears to be to split the difference on the East Coast with two new sites – one in Virginia just outside Washington and the other in Long Island City, the western most part of Queens just across the East River from Manhattan.

For those who don’t venture across the water, Long Island City is synonymous with the giant neon red ‘Pepsi- Cola’ sign visible from Manhattan, a relic from the beverage company’s factory that shut down in 1999.

It’s a hallmark of what Long Island City was for most of the 20th century – an industrial zone close to the river and the rail network.

But de-industrial­isation has forced the neighbourh­ood to reinvent itself since the dawn of the 21st century.

In the last 10 years, dozens of new towers have sprung up, injecting a new, more affluent breed of resident into the area along with companies such as Ralph Lauren and Uber, seduced by the proximity to Manhattan and New York’s airports.

The bank of the East River has been transforme­d into a landscaped park, invaded by designer strollers and joggers.

“They have built, built, built,” says Pascal Escriout, who owns French bistro Tournesol in Long Island City.

“Amazon coming or not doesn’t make a difference.

“If it’s not them, it’ll be someone else.”

“The place changed so much in the last 10 years, it’s just going to be some part of the neighbourh­ood,” says Mike Barratt, a store manager at Spokesman Cycles in southwest Long Island City.

The exact ‘campus’ space that Amazon could inhabit has not yet been made revealed, but there are plenty of options in a neighbourh­ood where ubermodern skyscraper­s rub shoulders with disused factory chimneys.

Some compare Long Island City to Williamsbu­rg, perhaps the most chic Brooklyn neighbourh­ood – and certainly the most fashionabl­e and most striking example of gentrifica­tion over the last 20 years.

There is an uneasy balance between young families who move in and buy at elevated prices – albeit still lower than in Manhattan – and long-term residents of the neighbourh­ood.

“A lot of people don’t own but they’ve been living here renting for 15, 20 years, and they’re getting priced out,” said Barratt. “They’re upset.” Long Island City has turned into a commuter town, complains Escriout.

“People stay home. And when they go out, they go to Manhattan.”

Dozens of luxury high-rise buildings, eminently suitable for senior Amazon executives, had been in the planning well before the company came on the scene, says Jonathan Miller, CEO of the real- estate firm Miller Samuel.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Photo shows a view of the waterfront of Long Island City in the Queens borough of New York, along the East River.
— AFP photo Photo shows a view of the waterfront of Long Island City in the Queens borough of New York, along the East River.

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