Bangkok Post

New Amazon office building to include homeless shelter

Plan to help burnish company’s image

- NICK WINGFIELD THE NEW YORK TIMES YORK TIMES ©2017 THE NEW

SEATTLE: A year ago, when Amazon.com let a homeless shelter for families move into a former motel it owned, it was viewed as a nice but fleeting gesture.

The motel was on a chunk of downtown property where Amazon planned to eventually erect yet another set of sparkling buildings to meet its insatiable need for office space in this city, where it has come to embody both the region’s economic boom and its struggles with affordabil­ity. The hotel would be torn down and the shelter kicked out when that time came.

Instead, Amazon has decided to let the shelter stay. In an unusual arrangemen­t, the company has agreed to give the shelter, Mary’s Place, a permanent home inside one of the new office buildings for which it will break ground in the autumn.

Amazon will give roughly half of the sixstorey building to the shelter, providing it with 47,000 square feet (4,366 square metres) of space with private rooms that can hold 65 families, or about 220 people and their pets. The facility, expected to open in early 2020, will have its own entrance and elevators.

“I see it as this huge gift because everywhere we go, we end up leaving,” said Marty Hartman, the executive director of Mary’s Place, which runs seven transition­al shelters around the Seattle area meant to house families until they can find permanent homes. “You come in and become a fabric of the neighbourh­ood you’re in, and then you say goodbye. That’s a hard thing for a lot of people to do.”

In an interview at the current Mary’s Place site owned by Amazon, which was bustling with families returning to the shelter for the evening, John Schoettler, Amazon’s vice president for global real estate and facilities, said the company would spend “tens of millions of dollars” on the design and constructi­on of the shelter’s portion of the building.

Amazon will pay the utilities for Mary’s Place, which will occupy the space rent free, although the organisati­on will continue to pay its own staff.

Schoettler said Amazon originally allowed the shelter to stay in the motel because of the severity of Seattle’s homelessne­ss crisis, which had prompted the city’s mayor to declare a state of emergency in 2015.

He said Amazon was impressed by Mary’s Place, and he described its plan to give the shelter a permanent home as an investment in the neighbourh­ood.

In San Francisco, Google, Salesforce. com and others have funded a campaign to find permanent housing for homeless people. But Nan Roman, president of the National Alliance to End Homelessne­ss, a non-profit advocacy group in Washington, D.C., said she was unaware of any other private corporatio­n integratin­g a homeless shelter into its building.

“Too often, homelessne­ss gets pushed to the other side of the tracks,” Roman said. “Keeping them as neighbours is nice.”

In Seattle, the plan could also help burnish Amazon’s image, which has taken some hits. It has been targeted by anti-gentrifica­tion activists, and its high-pressure work culture was the subject of a New York Times investigat­ion two years ago.

Amazon has also been bashed for being disengaged from civic life relative to local stalwarts known for their philanthro­pic giving, like Boeing Co, Microsoft Corp and Starbucks Corp. More recently, that has begun to change, with gifts like Amazon’s $10 million donation for the constructi­on of a new computer science building at the University of Washington.

“Its reputation in Seattle has certainly suffered,” said Alan Durning, executive director of Sightline Institute, a nonprofit research organisati­on focused on the Pacific Northwest. “Doing things like this may be in its enlightene­d self-interest, right on site for the world to see.”

Amazon is also a different company from just a few years ago. It has 30,000 employees in the city, making it Seattle’s largest private employer, and it has transforme­d large swaths of the downtown and South Lake Union neighbourh­oods.

While the company not long ago consistent­ly lost money, Amazon now regularly turns a profit thanks to its lucrative cloud-computing business, giving it more financial breathing room for activities like philanthro­py.

Seattle’s homelessne­ss crisis has also worsened, with tent encampment­s sprouting up by the side of freeways, under bridges and in parks. The surroundin­g King County area had the third-largest homeless population in the country last year, after New York and Los Angeles, according to an annual report to Congress by the US Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t.

More than 10,000 people are homeless in the area, with more than 4,000 of them living on the streets, the Seattle/King County Coalition on Homelessne­ss estimated in a report last year.

One of the residents of Mary’s Place, Patricia Abbott, a mother of four, said she became homeless after losing her job when her son was injured and she needed to tend to his medical needs.

She has been at the facility for six months and learned of Amazon’s support for the organisati­on at the shelter’s Christmas party when she received an American Girl doll for one of her children from the company.

“There’s people out there who really do care,” Abbott said.

Schoettler said he proposed the plan to let the shelter remain at a meeting in January of Amazon’s senior leadership, including Jeff Bezos, the company’s chief executive.

“It’s permanent,” Schoettler said, pausing for a moment before adding, “Until homelessne­ss is solved.”

 ??  ?? A former motel where Amazon.com allowed homeless families to stay in Seattle.
A former motel where Amazon.com allowed homeless families to stay in Seattle.
 ?? GRAPHITE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? In an undated image, an architectu­ral rendering of an office building in which Amazon.com plans to permanentl­y give space to a homeless shelter in the lower floors.
GRAPHITE VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES In an undated image, an architectu­ral rendering of an office building in which Amazon.com plans to permanentl­y give space to a homeless shelter in the lower floors.

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