The Denver Post

FIRST COLORADO AMAZON FACILITY SET FOR AURORA

452,000-square-foot sorting center to be in Aurora business park

- By Alicia Wallace and Tamara Chuang

Amazon.com has tapped the city of Aurora and the Majestic Commercent­er to park its first Colorado facility.

Five miles south of Denver Internatio­nal Airport, the 452,400-square-foot facility will be a sorting center, where sealed packages arrive and are then sorted by ZIP code for delivery to local post offices.

“We are hiring for hundreds of associates for our new package sortation center in Aurora,” Amazon spokeswoma­n Ashley S. Robinson confirmed in an e-mail Monday. She said the new facility is at 19799 E. 36th Drive in Aurora, also known as Majestic Commercent­er Building 29.

The move comes two months after the Seattle-based online retailer began charging Colorado residents sales tax on their purchases. It fueled speculatio­n that the company had establishe­d a business presence in the state.

In a full-page ad in Sunday’s Denver Post, Amazon said it was hiring parttime fulfillmen­t associates for its Aurora facility. The company also created an online Denver job portal, which said future employees would “sort, pack and ship customer orders.” The positions start at $13 per hour.

“Aurora’s location, workforce and business-friendly environmen­t were key ingredient­s in attracting the world’s largest e-commerce retailer to our city,” Aurora Economic Developmen­t Council president and CEO Wendy Mitchell said.

Robinson clarified that these advertised jobs are only for the sorting center. While hiring has begun, no opening date was available, she said.

The Majestic Commercent­er is a 1,500-acre business park that also houses hubs for FedEx and the Postal Service. Majestic Realty last year began constructi­on of Building 29, saying it expected to complete the speculativ­e warehouse and distributi­on center by Nov. 1, 2015.

After getting stung by UPS shipping delays during the 2013 Christmas season, Amazon began opening intermedia­ry facilities to better control the delivery process. Last year, it bought a fleet of trailers to move packages between facilities, which helps Amazon rely even less on FedEx, UPS and other carriers.

Amazon also operates large fulfillmen­t centers in more than two dozen states scattered mostly along the coasts.

Since late March, Amazon has announced plans to open at least three more fulfillmen­t centers, each creating 1,000 full-time jobs.

Those include an 800,000-squarefoot facility near Kansas City in Edgerton, Kan.; a 1 million-square-foot center in Haslet, Texas, north of Fort Worth; and its seventh in California — a 1.1 million-square-foot center in San Bernardino.

Sortation centers tend to be smaller, at around 200,000 to 300,000 square feet, according to logistics consulting firm MWPVL.

But they are also in cities that already have fulfillmen­t centers. Robinson did not share whether the new Aurora site also will have a nearby fulfillmen­t center, as is the case with sortation centers in Seattle and 15 other locations.

Amazon’s expansion into Colorado is “to better serve customers, and this facility will enable faster delivery time,” Robinson said.

In Kent, Wash., an Amazon sortation center cut delivery time by nine hours so customers could still get two-day delivery if they ordered by 11:59 p.m., instead of the previous 3 p.m., according to a story in The Seattle Times. It also enabled Sunday delivery.

State Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade spokeswoma­n Holly Shrewsbury confirmed that Amazon officials “engaged our office to talk about tax environmen­t and real estate options,” adding that Amazon did not receive any financial in- centives.

In November, Majestic Realty Co. acquired 530 acres to expand the business park. The park has 3.5 million square feet of industrial space and the ability to hold 12 million square feet in warehouse and distributi­on facilities.

At the time, Majestic Realty executive vice president Randy Hertel said “e-commerce is driving the commercial real estate industry in ways we’ve not seen before. We’re seeing greater demand in the 1 million-and-upsquare-foot range with land requiremen­ts and tenant improvemen­ts slightly different than the traditiona­l warehouse and distributi­on building.”

Hertel declined to comment Monday.

The Denver industrial market saw “record levels of developmen­t” in the first quarter this year, according to a report by CBRE, a commercial real estate agency.

Approximat­ely 4.4 million square feet of projects are in developmen­t, with more than half near the airport. Constructi­on on industrial projects is 52 percent greater than the previous peak of second quarter 2007. About 80 percent of the activity is speculativ­e, according to CBRE.

 ?? Getty Images file ?? Amazon.com workers pack orders at one of the company’s fulfillmen­t centers in Tracy, Calif., in January 2015.
Getty Images file Amazon.com workers pack orders at one of the company’s fulfillmen­t centers in Tracy, Calif., in January 2015.

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