Amazon.com will launch a fulfillment center and delivery station in Virginia Beach, creating an estimated 1,000 full-time jobs, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced Monday.
Groundbreaking began Monday, according to Ian Allen-Anderson, an Amazon spokesperson. The fulfillment center will be located at the intersection of Harpers and Dam Neck roads, and the delivery station will be “at an adjacent site.” Amazon declined to disclose its expected capital investment.
Amazon anticipates launching operations at the delivery station in time for the 2024 holiday season and at the 650,000-square-foot robotics fulfillment center in 2025. Employees at this center will pack and ship small items like books, electronics and toys, according to a news release.
“Amazon’s cutting-edge fulfillment centers generate major capital investment and thousands of jobs and strengthen Virginia’s position as a logistics industry leader on the East Coast,” Youngkin said in a statement. “We see Amazon’s expanding footprint impacting economic growth and innovation across the commonwealth, and we will continue to compete for additional investment in Virginia.”
Amazon opened its first fulfillment center in the state in 2006, in Sterling. The Virginia Beach buildings will be the company’s 14th sorting and fulfillment center in Virginia and its 17th delivery station. The e-tailer expects to launch an Amazon robotics fulfillment center in Henrico County, announced in 2021, later this fall. In September 2022, Amazon opened a 3.8 million-square-foot robotics fulfillment center in Suffolk, the second largest building in the state, after the Pentagon. That facility cost $230 million to build, and it employs about 1,500 people.
Along with HQ2, the e-tailer’s $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington, Amazon has 15 Whole Foods Markets, five Amazon Fresh stores and three Prime Now Hubs — located in Virginia Beach, Richmond and Springfield and focused on one- and two-hour deliveries to Prime members — in the state.
The Amazon Web Services subsidiary also operates multiple data centers in the state but has not disclosed the number. From 2011 to 2021, AWS invested more than $51.9 billion in Virginia, according to an economic impact statement released in June. In July, the Spotsylvania County Board of Supervisors voted to amend the county’s comprehensive plan to make data centers a targeted industry, and AWS has since filed three rezoning requests within the county and one in neighboring Caroline County.
“Virginia is a great state for business and gives us the opportunity to better serve our customers in the region,” Holly Sullivan, Amazon’s vice president of worldwide economic development and public policy, said in a statement. “We are excited for our future in the commonwealth, and for what this means for our customers as we continue to grow.”
Since 2010, the company has invested more than $109 billion in Virginia and has created more than 36,000 direct jobs and supported 200,000 indirect jobs in fields like construction and professional services, according to a news release, and has contributed more than $72 billion to the state’s gross domestic product.
The Virginia Economic Development Partnership worked with the city of Virginia Beach and the Hampton Roads Alliance to secure the project. The city will fund stormwater and road improvements between Dam Neck Road and London Bridge Road to provide access to the new facilities, and Dominion Energy will provide power to the sites.
Let the tech wizardry begin: Amazon.com Inc. held the grand opening and ribbon cutting for the first phase of HQ2, the ecommerce goliath’s $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington County, on Thursday.
Dignitaries in attendance included Gov. Glenn Youngkin, Arlington County Board Chair Christian Dorsey, JBG Smith Properties Chief Development Officer Kai Reynolds, Clark Construction Capital Group CEO Lee DeLong and three Amazon vice presidents.
“It has been incredibly rewarding to see everything that we thought our partnership could [be] materialize and deliver transformational change,” Dorsey said in a statement Thursday. “Congratulations to Amazon, my colleagues and to our entire Arlington community. This is a great moment in our history.”
Attendees were invited to tour Merlin, the first partially open tower at HQ2. It’s one of two 22-story twin towers erected as part of Metropolitan Park, HQ2’s first phase. Despite Thursday’s grand opening ceremonies, Merlin has been open since the week of May 22, when Amazon began moving about 2,000 employees into floors 1 through 14 of the building.
Amazon plans to add 1,000 to 2,000 more workers per week during the summer, and expects to have all existing HQ2 teams moved into both towers by late September or early October. So far, the No. 2-ranked Fortune Global 500 company has hired 8,000 HQ2 employees locally, and when fully open, Met Park will be able to support more than 14,000 employees.
Amazon thinks of its buildings “as almost living things,” Holly Sullivan, Amazon’s vice president of economic development and public policy, said during the first week employees moved in. Merlin — named after the codename for Amazon QuickSight, a cloud-based business intelligence service product — hummed with activity.
Plants line the staircase to Merlin’s second floor and are scattered throughout. With windowed garage-door-like walls on the ground floor tilted open during pleasant weather, Merlin can blur the distinction between inside and outside. “We think that our buildings do have personality,” Sullivan says. “We do want to help them grow. We do want to help them develop and evolve.”
As of Dec. 31, 2022, Amazon reported more than $598 million in capital investment in HQ2, according to its first incentive application to the Virginia Economic Development Partnership.
Amazon announced HQ2 would be coming to Virginia in November 2018, and state officials trumpeted an anticipated 25,000-person Amazon HQ2 workforce by 2030, the biggest economic development deal in the state’s history. Initially, HQ2 was intended to be a $5 billion project, split between Arlington and New York’s Long Island City neighborhood, before Amazon pulled back from its New York plans amid local backlash over government incentives.
But the unexpected arrival of the pandemic in 2020 — along with more people working remotely, followed by 18,000 layoffs by Amazon in 2022 and early 2023 — put a question mark on Amazon’s original plans for a bustling office campus in downtown Arlington.
Nonetheless, Amazon stands by its original HQ2 job creation goal, which would see it add 17,000 jobs over the next 6 1/2 years. “We are unwavering in our commitment to Virginia,” Sullivan says.
Office space isn’t obsolete for Amazon, which in May started a hybrid policy requiring at least three in-office days a week, although vice presidents set specific office policies for their teams. The e-tailer will adapt its spaces as needed, Sullivan says. Merlin includes conference rooms, team suites and a plethora of common areas with varied seating.
Amazon included Merlin’s 15th floor on the grand opening tour, although it was not yet open to employees. The company plans to open the remaining floors in phases. The lower floors of the second tower, named Jasper after the codename for an Alexa component that provides tools for customer settings, were set to be complete around the end of June.
A big landing
“We’re just really excited about this new milestone,” says Arlington Economic Development Director Ryan Touhill. “This is going to be really great to see these buildings come online. It’s really great to see Amazon’s commitment to the community, and it’s going to be great to see their workers coming in to National Landing and enjoying all the things that have been built there all throughout the pandemic.”
Composed of Potomac Yard, Crystal City and Pentagon City, the National Landing Business Improvement District came from the Crystal City Business Improvement District, which expanded its coverage in 2019 and changed its name in 2020. Economic development officials coined the term, but Amazon’s HQ2 announcement popularized it.
Amazon leases 387,000 square feet of office space in Arlington from Bethesda, Maryland-based JBG Smith, about 300,000 of which it will vacate this year as employees move into Merlin. JBG Smith is also HQ2’s primary developer and developed the roughly 109,000-square-foot entertainment and shopping Central District Retail area in National Landing. The developer owns 2,856 apartment units and nearly 7 million square feet of office space in the district, with 1,583 apartments under construction.
In March, Amazon confirmed it would pause construction on HQ2’s second phase, PenPlace, which was set to include 3.3 million square feet of office and retail space spread across three 22-story buildings, as well as the showcase spiral Helix building and 20,000 square feet for Arlington Community High School. But Amazon has since indicated it plans to move forward with PenPlace sometime in 2024, although it hadn’t released an official timeline as of early June, according to Arlington Economic Development.
Due to Amazon’s hybrid work policy, some observers have expressed concerns that area businesses will see less foot traffic than anticipated, but locals remain optimistic.
“Certainly, the numbers are a little bit different from pre-pandemic, where you sort of expected that generally people were on the five-day work schedule, but as their hiring increases, that still means many more bodies on the ground … [who are] able to patronize area establishments,” says Dorsey.
And, despite Amazon’s post-pandemic shift to hybrid work, Arlington and Alexandria will still benefit from an influx in residents who work in tech, says Terry Clower, director of George Mason University’s Center for Regional Analysis and the Northern Virginia chair of GMU’s Schar School of Policy and Government.
“With hybrid, maybe [commercial activity from office workers won’t be] as much, but if people are living there, that’s probably a more reliable market anyhow,” he says. “It shifts the nature of the demand a little bit — maybe it’s [a] more dinner than lunch kind of thing — but all of that just means that it’s still activity and it’s balanced out.”
Varied spaces
Met Park doesn’t offer free lunches, but it includes plenty of amenities and perks to welcome workers into the office. On the ground floor, employees and passersby can find free coffee at Good Company Doughnuts & Cafe. Employees have a bike storage room that wraps around part of the building, with racks for 620 bikes, as well as charging stations for e-bikes and options for bike repair, plus wash stations and showers.
Employees swiping into Merlin’s first “center of energy,” Amazon’s term for common areas or gathering spaces, are greeted by a strong smell of coffee emanating from Maryland-based Chesapeake Coffee Roasters, as well as a wall of grab-and-go drinks and snacks and a sitting area with booths. Baltimore-based Zeke’s Coffee is set to be the roaster at Jasper.
Head up the serpentine central staircase, and you’ll discover an arts and crafts room with a window-lined wall, high wooden tables and dogwood decorations hanging from the ceiling, a nod to Virginia’s state flower. Teams can book the room, but for several hours a day the studio remains open for employees to use as they wish.
If craft time isn’t their preferred break activity, workers can step next door into the video game room or the dimly lit, carpeted billiards room with pool and foosball tables, as well as more seating options. For a surprise, pull the book titled “How to Throw a Party” in the bookcase and prepare for music and flashing lights.
Met Park also is dog-friendly — perhaps too much so, as barking is a given — with a wall dedicated to photos of employees’ pets, and dog stalls for employees to secure their pups while they grab food from an eatery, like The Daily, which features rotating daily specials of foods from around the world.
Merlin also incorporates outdoor spaces, including terraces and dog runs, and the third-floor terrace overlooking Met Park’s 2.5-acre public park has two electric grills.
Although more offices now have facilities for new moms to pump milk in privacy, Amazon’s mothers’ suite — decorated with large photos of baby ducks — offers quiet rooms with armchairs, provided pumps and breast milk bags, as well as a fridge to store milk, a sink and a changing table. The two towers will have 27 mothers’ rooms across their two suites.
A design adaptation resulting from the pandemic and employee feedback, team suites provide collaborative spaces that teams can reserve to work on a project. Suites have different themes, but all include a lounge, flex space and variously sized meeting areas.
“One of the things we learned about our employees and the way that they missed working was more of that collaboration, so we’ve … been more intentional in this building and in Jasper to create more of those convenient spaces for team building [and] quick meetings, whether it be for two weeks or two hours,” Sullivan says.
A broader reach
Amazon often proclaims its commitment to communities where it has a significant presence — whether it’s through the $2 billion Housing Equity Fund active in Arlington, and Nashville, Tennessee, and Washington’s Puget Sound region, or allocation of retail space in its office buildings.
Met Park will house 14 ground-floor retailers, including a day care center that’s open to the community. Merlin’s second floor has a 700-person meeting room available to the community for reservations, with shutters along its window-lined wall that automatically adjust to outdoor light changes throughout the day or can be closed by remote control. The room’s skylights feature electrochromic glass that can adjust to let in or block sunlight.
The public park includes looping walking paths, a children’s playground and an off-leash dog walk, as well as a dog park that will open once grass has firmly taken root.
On the 15th floor, Amazon is growing an urban garden with vegetables like diva cucumbers, a nearly seedless variety. Washington, D.C.-based urban farming company Loving Carrots harvests the vegetables. Amazon donates them to Arlington-based Kitchen of Purpose, which uses the meals its culinary trainees cook for its food assistance program.
Since January 2021, the company says, it has committed $795 million in loans and grants to create or preserve 4,400 affordable housing units in and around Arlington and Washington, D.C. According to apartment listing service Apartment List, the median rent for a one-bedroom unit in Arlington was $2,096 in June, and the median for a two-bedroom unit was $2,508. The median price for homes sold in Arlington was $680,000 as of April, according to the Northern Virginia Association of Realtors.
Beyond offering the latest in office design for corporate employees, HQ2 is expected to spur further development in the surrounding area of National Landing and across Northern Virginia.
Amazon’s campus is the crown jewel of National Landing, says Tracy Sayegh Gabriel, president and executive director of the National Landing Business Improvement District, who notes that there are other major area developments coming online, too. One is developer JBG Smith’s Crystal City Water Park, a 1.6-acre park, now under construction, which will have 11 restaurants and water features, including a body of water surrounded by a scalloped wall and topped by a bar.
“We’re that lived-in downtown that so many downtowns are aspiring to be,” Gabriel says. “As we look at this pipeline between the ambitious footprint of Amazon and this 8,000-unit residential pipeline [ranging from proposed units to buildings under construction], we are going to continue to have that sought-after balance of jobs and residents.”
Already, there is a new Metrorail station at Potomac Yard in Alexandria, and Atlanta-based real estate company Cortland has spent $1 billion to acquire, rebrand and renovate several apartment buildings in Rosslyn, Pentagon City and Clarendon.
At least for Arlington, “the benefits [of HQ2] will still be substantial, even if they are a little slower to materialize than maybe we thought a year ago,” Dorsey says.
Retailers in the immediate area around HQ2 are expecting a boost as well. One block down from Met Park, Commonwealth Joe Coffee Roasters has already seen an uptick in sales, says Commonwealth Joe co-founder and CEO Robert Peck. Sales increased from an average of 520 transactions a day the week of April 23 to almost 600 transactions a day during the week that Amazon opened Merlin.
“On a nice day, [the park] could be the difference of someone coming to Commonwealth Joe, if they can get their cup of coffee and find somewhere to sit,” Peck notes.
Ripple effects
Along with smaller road and bike lane improvements, HQ2’s opening coincides with major infrastructure projects, including a pedestrian bridge connecting Crystal City to the Reagan National Airport, which the Arlington County Board approved $4.2 million to design. The bridge is one of the transportation projects that Virginia agreed to partially fund because of HQ2.
If Amazon decided to stop growing HQ2, the halt might affect some infrastructure improvement timelines, Clower says, but either way, “those are great investments increating walkable, easy commute areas,” that will aid development independent of Amazon.
Also, state economic development officials expect HQ2 and Virginia’s correlating investments in the region and talent, to help Northern Virginia attract more corporate headquarters and tech companies in the future.
“I’m most excited about securing the corporate headquarters of one of America’s most innovative companies in Virginia through a partnership that is not only going to help Amazon thrive in its new corporate headquarters, but that is going to enable Virginia’s people and other companies to thrive,” says Jason El Koubi, president and CEO of the Virginia Economic Development Partnership and a key player in the team that lured HQ2 to Virginia.
Major defense contractors Boeing Co. and Raytheon Technologies Corp. made summer 2022 announcements that they would move their corporate headquarters to Arlington, although it isn’t known if HQ2 influenced either decision.
Amazon is contributing to a change in how people view Northern Virginia, which had long been seen by outsiders as “kind of a government town,” says Victor Hoskins, president and CEO of the Fairfax County Economic Development Authority. As Arlington’s former economic development director, he was a leader in the team that landed HQ2.
“We’re not viewed that way anymore,” he says. “People view us as a center of technology. They view us as a place of innovation, and I think Amazon had a lot to do with that.” Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Corp. significantly increased their presences in the region in the years following Amazon’s 2018 announcement, and, in April 2019, Google LLC announced it would be the anchor tenant at Fairfax County’s Reston Station office building.
That announcement, combined with other tech company expansions in the area, helped cement the region’s new reputation, Hoskins adds. Also, there’s the higher education component of Virginia’s bid to bring in Amazon, which the company identified as its biggest motivator for choosing the commonwealth and which will help the state grow its own tech workers.
The state’s Tech Talent Investment Program aims to produce 31,000 in-demand computer science and related graduates in the next two decades. That’s led to the construction of Virginia Tech’s $1 billion Innovation Campus in Alexandria and George Mason University’s $250 million Institute for Digital InnovAtion (IDIA) in Arlington’s Rosslyn-Ballston corridor. Virginia Tech’s classes are already operating in temporary classrooms in Alexandria, and its first academic building, at a cost of $302 million, is set to open in fall 2024. At its full buildout, the Innovation Campus will produce about 500 master’s program graduates and 50 doctoral candidates annually.
“The state that leads in talent development will be the state that leads in economic development,” El Koubi says. “Virginia is on some very, very solid ground in that respect.”
Amazon Web Services Inc. invested more than $51.9 billion in Virginia between 2011 and 2021, according to an economic impact statement released by the company Wednesday.
That investment total includes capital and operational expenditures in Virginia, including Loudoun, Fairfax and Prince William counties, AWS said. During that same period, the company has contributed an estimated $8.2 billion total gross domestic product in the state. In 2021, AWS employed about 8,710 full-time workers in roles including data center engineers and technicians, solutions architects, software engineers, business developers. That same year, about 11,180 full- and part-time highly skilled workers supported AWS construction, operations and maintenance on-site at AWS facilities in Virginia.
AWS is a subsidiary of Amazon.com Inc. and is the world’s largest cloud computing provider. Virginia became the home of AWS’ first data center in 2006; in 2022, the company paid more than $334 million in business personal property taxes in connection with its data centers. While the company would not disclose how many data centers it currently operates in Virginia, in January, Gov. Glenn Youngkin announced that AWS plans to invest an additional $35 billion by 2040 to establish multiple data center campuses across the state and add 1,000 jobs.
Northern Virginia has long been the epicenter of the world’s data landscape. In 2022, the region accounted for 64% of the total new data center capacity brought online in primary markets across the U.S., according to the North American Data Center Trends Report by CBRE. More than 70% of the world’s internet traffic comes through Loudoun County’s Data Center Alley.
Buddy Rizer, executive director of Loudoun’s economic development department, told Virginia Business that AWS is Loudoun’s largest data center operator. In January, AWS had at least 65 centers in operation or under development in the county, though Rizer could not provide an exact updated number Wednesday.
Loudoun has more than 200 data centers comprising more than 26 million square feet and at least 4 million more in development. Rizer estimated Loudoun’s data centers would contribute more than $700 million in local tax revenue in the county in 2023. In nearby Prince William County, which has become a new focus for data center construction, about 39 data centers total more than 6.9 million square feet with an additional 4.8 million square feet in development. Prince William’s data center tax revenues increased from $6.2 million in 2012 to $101.42 million in 2022.
In addition to its economic impact on the state, AWS announced initiatives around science, technology, engineering, arts, and mathematics (STEAM) education and workforce and job training, including for women in cloud technology. In October 2022, AWS opened its first East Coast-based skills center to provide free, in-person foundational courses on cloud computing. That location, in Arlington County, is near the company’s East Coast headquarters, HQ2, which recently started opening to employees at the end of May.
About 2,000 employees moved into the first open tower at Amazon.com Inc.’s $2.5 billion HQ2 East Coast headquarters in Arlington this week.
Floors 1-14 of Merlin, one of Amazon’s two 22-story office towers in Metropolitan Park, the first phase of HQ2, opened Monday. The tech giant anticipates opening the remaining floors in phases, likely two floors at a time, with plans to have the 15th floor open before the end of June. The company has hired 8,000 employees locally so far.
“On the first day, in the afternoon, people were bringing their kids in and their partners, I think to show off [the building],” said Rachael Lighty, Amazon’s head of public relations for policy and HQ2.
Amazon expects to have roughly 1,000 to 2,000 more employees move in by teams each week. The lower floors of HQ2’s second building, dubbed Jasper, should be completed in the next 30 to 40 days, around the end of June, according to Holly Sullivan, Amazon’s vice president of economic development and public policy. By the end of September or early October, all HQ2 teams will be invited into the towers’ 2.1 million square feet.
Under its current office policy, Amazon is “encouraging” employees to come into the office at least three days a week, but vice presidents set office policies for their teams.
HQ2 will house a variety of teams, including devices, Amazon Web Services and corporate functions like finance, legal, public policy, communications and corporate facilities teams.
“It is truly a headquarters. We have that diversity of roles within HQ2,” Sullivan said.
Met Park’s two towers can house more than 14,500 employees. Despite beginning large-scale layoffs in November 2022, Amazon has remained firm on its commitment to create 25,000 jobs at HQ2 by 2030. The global e-tailer said in March that it was delaying HQ2’s second phase, PenPlace, but has been resolute that the delay is not a cancellation: “Our commitment remains unchanged,” Sullivan said.
Met Park will house 14 ground-floor retailers and also includes a 2.5-acre public park with walking paths, a children’s playground and a dog walk, as well as a dog park that will open once grass has firmly taken root.
Amazon.com Inc. is moving more than 8,000 employees into the first phase of HQ2, its $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington’s emerging National Landing area, this week. The e-tailer plans to officially open HQ2’s first phase, Metropolitan Park (Met Park), in June and to complete its move-in by the end of the summer. However, the No. 2-ranked Fortune Global 500 company said in March that it was delaying construction on HQ2’s second phase, PenPlace.
Amazon expects to create 25,000 jobs for the project by 2030 and is eligible for up to $550 million in state grants, should it meet the required annual hiring goals and average annual wages.
“This project is extraordinary in many respects,” Arlington County Board Chair Christian Dorsey said in a statement. “It will bring us significantly closer to fulfilling the community’s vision of Arlington and National Landing as an urban neighborhood with a better balance of office, residential and retail development, more and better public spaces and more and better access for pedestrians and cyclists.”
Met Park consists of 2.1 million square feet of office space and more than 50,000 square feet of retail space housing 14 businesses, as well as a 2.5-acre park. The campus is on park to receive a LEED Platinum certification, the highest LEED certification level.
Met Park’s two 22-story, 327-feet-tall office buildings can house 12,500 employees. One tower is named Jasper, the codename for an Alexa component that provides tools for customer settings. Amazon has named the other tower Merlin, after the codename for Amazon QuickSight, a cloud-based business intelligence service product that can create interactive dashboards. The buildings have a total of 62 elevators.
The towers include “centers of energy,” Amazon’s term for spaces for employees to gather, including four coffee shops and three all-electric commercial kitchens. The areas are designed to handle 30% of the offices’ employee capacity, an intentional move by the company to encourage employees to “venture out into the neighborhood,” according to a news release.
The 14 ground-floor retailers include a bike shop, a dog day care, a fitness studio, an early childhood education center, a spa, restaurants and the Museum of Contemporary Art (MoCA) Arlington’s Innovation Studio.
The towers have outdoor spaces within their designs: about 2.7 acres of rooftop landscaping, about an acre of green roof with native plants, two event terraces, two café terraces, one garden terrace, an urban farm and outdoor kitchens.
The public park includes walking paths, a dog run and a children’s play area and garden.
For commuting employees, Met Park has 620 bike racks, four levels of below-grade parking with 290 electric vehicle charging stations and pedestrian pathways for employees taking the Metro. On May 19, the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority opened the Potomac Yard-VT station, anchored by Virginia Tech’s $1 billion Innovation Campus and two stops away from HQ2.
Amazon.com Inc. is delaying construction on the second phase of HQ2, its $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington County.
The news comes as Amazon plans to open HQ2’s first phase, Metropolitan Park,
in June, and as the Fortune Global 500 tech company laid off a record 18,000 workers amid concerns over slowing revenues and a potential recession.
Amazon anticipated the groundbreaking for its second phase, PenPlace, to occur this year. While the e-tailer has not offered an updated timeline for construction on phase two, Amazon has begun some pre-construction work, including applying for permits, and expects to continue such efforts this year.
“We’ve already hired more than 8,000 employees in HQ2 and we’re excited to welcome them to our new Met Park campus this June,” Amazon Vice President of Global Real Estate and Facilities John Schoettler said in a statement March 3. “We’re always evaluating space plans to make sure they fit our business needs and to create a great experience for employees, and since Met Park will have space to accommodate more than 14,000 employees, we’ve decided to shift the groundbreaking of PenPlace out a bit.”
Amazon originally announced that HQ2 would create 25,000 jobs by 2030, and the company says its hiring goals have not changed.
Amazon rapidly grew its global workforce during the pandemic, ending 2021 with more than 1.6 million employees, up from 798,000 in the fourth quarter of 2019, according to CNBC. The company began layoffs in November 2022 and paused corporate hiring. Citing the need to reevaluate designs for hybrid work environments, Amazon also paused construction in July 2022 on six office buildings in Bellevue, Washington, and Nashville, Tennessee, according to Reuters.
The company has not yet decided whether it will modify its PenPlace plans, which include 3.3 million square feet of office and retail space spread across three, 22-story buildings, as well as the distinctive spiral Helix building.
Arlington County Board Chair Christian Dorsey says the delay is not a cause for concern.
“As we all negotiate the post-pandemic reality, everyone from every sector is thinking about … long-term plans in a new light, and sadly, we don’t all have all of the answers,” he says, “so it’s not incredibly surprising that Amazon is taking a pause before beginning the second phase of a project for which they haven’t fully opened the first phase.”
Amazon.com Inc.’s Amazon Housing Equity Fund Director Catherine Buell is leaving the e-tail giant.
Housing Equity Fund Principal Senthil Sankaran will be the interim head of the fund team, according to an Amazon spokesperson.
Buell joined Amazon in 2020 as head of community development for Amazon in the Community and became director of the e-tailer’s Housing Equity Fund in October 2021.
Amazon announced the $2 billion fund in 2021 to keep and create more than 20,000 affordable units in Arlington, Nashville and the Puget Sound area of Washington.
An Amazon spokesperson said in a statement: “We’re grateful for Catherine’s leadership and wish her all the best as she pursues new opportunities. Since launching the Amazon Housing Equity Fund, we’ve committed over $1.6 billion to help build and preserve more than 12,000 affordable homes in our hometown communities and we will continue to invest in this space, in partnership with local and diverse organizations.”
Before joining Amazon, Buell was vice president of policy and programs for the Greater Washington Partnership. Prior to that, she was president and CEO of the Atlanta Housing Authority, according to her LinkedIn profile. Buell holds an undergraduate degree from Spelman College and a law degree from Georgetown University.
Buell’s last day at Amazon is Friday, according to Washington Business Journal, and she plans to stay in Washington, D.C.
Affordable housing in Arlington became a priority for Amazon because of its $2.5 billion HQ2 headquarters, which is expected to create 25,000 jobs by 2030, Buell told Virginia Business in 2022. In March, Amazon announced it was delaying construction on the second phase of the East Coast headquarters campus, although the first phase is still set to open in June.
One of several Arlington-area projects that received funding under Buell’s tenure is the 1,334-unit Barcroft Apartments complex. In late 2021, Amazon and Arlington County teamed up to provide more than $300 million in financing — $150 million from the county and $160 million from Amazon in low-rate loans — to help Washington, D.C.-based Jair Lynch Real Estate Partners purchase the complex. Jair Lynch pledged to keep all units affordable for people making up to 60% of the area median income for 99 years.
In September 2022, Amazon Housing Equity Fund announced it was committing $147 million to build or preserve 1,260 affordable homes in Washington, D.C., across several locations. That announcement brought the fund’s investment for the DMV area to $163 million, according to a news release.
Amazon.com Inc. is delaying construction on the second phase of HQ2, its $2.5 billion East Coast headquarters in Arlington County.
The news comes as Amazon plans to open HQ2’s first phase, Metropolitan Park, in June, and as the Fortune Global 500 tech company laid off a record 18,000+ workers amid concerns over slowing revenues and a potential recession.
Amazon had anticipated the groundbreaking for its second phase, PenPlace, to occur this year. While the e-tailer has not offered an updated timeline for construction on PenPlace, Amazon has begun some pre-construction work, including applying for permits, and expects to continue such efforts this year.
In a statement, Amazon Vice President of Global Real Estate and Facilities John Schoettler said, “We’ve already hired more than 8,000 employees in HQ2 and we’re excited to welcome them to our new Met Park campus this June. We’re always evaluating space plans to make sure they fit our business needs and to create a great experience for employees, and since Met Park will have space to accommodate more than 14,000 employees, we’ve decided to shift the groundbreaking of PenPlace (the second phase of HQ2) out a bit.”
Amazon originally announced that HQ2 would create 25,000 jobs by 2030, and the company says its hiring goals have not changed.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Amazon rapidly grew its global workforce, ending 2021 with more than 1.6 million employees, up from 798,000 in the fourth quarter of 2019, according to CNBC. The company began layoffs in November 2022, at the time expected to total 10,000 employees, and in January, that number grew to 18,000, according to The Wall Street Journal. Amazon, which also paused corporate hiring at the same time, is one of several tech giants that have begun large-scale layoffs in recent months, including Google LLC, which cut 12,000 employees, and Meta Platforms Inc., which cut more than 11,000 people.
Amazon has pulled back on other real estate projects over the past year. Citing the need to reevaluate designs for hybrid work environments, Amazon pausing construction in July 2022 on six office buildings in Bellevue, Washington, and Nashville, Tennessee, according to Reuters.
The company has not yet made a decision on whether it will modify its PenPlace plans. Plans for HQ2’s second phase currently include 3.3 million square feet of office and retail space spread across three 22-story buildings, as well as the distinctive spiral Helix building, along with 100,000 square feet of retail space and about 2.5 acres of public space. In April 2022, Arlington County approved the plans for PenPlace, which. include 20,000 square feet for Arlington Community High School.
Amazon purchased the 11-acre development site for PenPlace for $198 million in June 2022 from Bethesda, Maryland-based developer JBG Smith Properties, Amazon’s HQ2 development partner. Unless the Arlington County Board grants an extension, Amazon’s site plan approval will expire on April 23, 2025, if the company has not received a footing to grade permit to construct the second phase’s first building by then. Amazon’s use permits for the proposed public park and high school will also expire on April 23, 2025, if construction or operation has not started by then, according to Arlington County Board agenda documents.
“We continue to work with Amazon to advance plans for PenPlace, and look forward to helping Amazon realize its complete vision for HQ2,” JBG Smith CEO Matt Kelly said in a statement.
HQ2’s roughly 2.1 million-square-foot first phase consists of two 22-story office buildings, about 50,000 square feet of retail space, a park and a 700-person meeting center.
In February, Amazon announced that employees would be required to work in person at least three days a week beginning in May, a divergence from its previous remote work policy. A group of Amazon employees released a petition calling for remote work to continue, according to CNBC.
Amazon is eligible for up to $750 million in incentives from a state economic development package based on its annual hiring goals at a stipulated average annual wage. While the company became eligible to submit its first payment application on April 1, 2020 — reflecting its job creation through Dec. 31, 2019 — and receive its first payment in fiscal year 2024 — which begins July 1, 2023 — Amazon instead submitted a progress report, according to Suzanne Clark, Virginia Economic Development Partnership’s managing director of communications and marketing.
Amazon submitted progress reports in April 2021 and 2022 as well. The e-tailer has until April 1 this year to submit its first application for payment, which would reflect its performance from 2019 through 2022. Amazon would then be eligible to receive its first grant payment in fiscal year 2027, meaning on or after July 1, 2026.
The company said it didn’t want to begin requesting payments until it reached key milestones, like the opening of Met Park, because it intends to be a community partner. In the memorandum of understanding between the state and Amazon, the tech giant’s cumulative job creation goal was 4,983 by Dec. 31, 2022. With 8,000 new jobs so far, Amazon is well ahead of its hiring timeline.
Arlington County Board Chair Christian Dorsey said the delay is not a cause for concern. “As we all negotiate the post-pandemic reality, everyone from every sector is thinking about its long-term plans in a new light, and sadly, we don’t all have all of the answers,” he said, “so it’s not incredibly surprising that Amazon is taking a pause before beginning the second phase of a project for which they haven’t fully opened the first phase.”
Arlington will continue its infrastructure projects around the site, like the 12th Street South Complete Street Project, which will create a streetscape with landscaping, sidewalks, pedestrian ramps and streetlights on 12th Street between Clark and Eads streets. The project will also create center-running transit-only lanes.
Director, Amazon Housing Equity Fund, Amazon.com Inc. Arlington County
WHATWOULDACOMPETITORSAYABOUTYOU?Much like the Roomba vacuum cleaner, Catherine is “pleasantly persistent” and doesn’t give up. She will keep at it, work to find a middle ground and show results.
WHATI’VELEARNED:Don’t forget to have fun along the way! Life will take you by surprise in the most wonderful way, if you let it.
WHATMAKESME PASSIONATEABOUTMYWORK: I am deeply moved by the ability to help people. Much of my work is serving as a bridge builder — connecting highly resourced, sophisticated, caring business leaders with community leaders and organizations that are doing truly meaningful work.
WHAT’SONETHINGYOUWOULDCHANGEABOUTVIRGINIA? I would make it easier to build more affordable housing options across the state.
MOSTRECENTBOOKREAD:“Will,” by Will Smith and “True Refuge: Finding Peace and Freedom in Your Own Awakened Heart,” by Tara Brach
DID YOU KNOW? Buell leads Amazon’s housing equity fund, which has committed $795 million in loans and grants for 4,400 affordable residences in Northern Virginia and Washington, D.C.
Billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott has pledged $15 million to the Warrenton-based PATH Foundation, an organization that provides grants for health-focused organizations in Fauquier, Rappahannock and Culpeper counties, PATH announced Thursday.
Scott, the billionaire ex-wife of Amazon.com Inc. founder Jeff Bezos, has made large donations to many nonprofits and universities, including in Virginia, over the past two years. She notified PATH Foundation of the grant recently, the organization said in a news release.
“We were so excited to learn that Ms. Scott selected the PATH Foundation for this generous contribution,” Christy Connolly, PATH Foundation’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “We were completely taken by surprise that she was aware of the work we’ve done in the community and thrilled to have this validation of efforts we’ve made since our inception.”
Connolly added, “Our board and staff are incredibly grateful for Ms. Scott’s grant and will use this significant gift to continue investing in our community, guided by our mission and strategic plan.”
PATH was started as the Fauquier Health Foundation and changed its name in 2013 when the Fauquier Health System was sold to LifePoint Health, becoming a standalone, private philanthropic foundation. Since then, PATH has provided $60 million in grants and partnerships with recipients focused on health, childhood wellness, mental health and senior services.
In 2020, Scott made record-setting donations to Hampton, Norfolk State and Virginia State universities, as well as Goodwill of Central and Coastal Virginia. After receiving a quarter of Bezos’ Amazon stock in their 2019 divorce, Scott has donated more than $12 billion to over 1,200 organizations since 2020, according to her foundation.
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