Amazon Headquarters
Amazon New $ 2.5 Billion Headquarters
As one of the five most valuable companies in the world, consumer giant Amazon Headquarters needs a plush, statement headquarters to call its own.. or rather, in this case, two.
join us as we explore the development and construction of the company's second American hub when Amazon unveiled plans to build their new, second headquarters in 2017, the company received no less than 230 proposals - requests, really - from cities and states across the US to build on their land.
Each saw the benefits for their area and was looking to become the new site of what would inevitably be the tech firm's latest crowning glory.
After the glut of proposals, Amazon had originally planned to jointly locate its newest headquarters in New York, but after local protests including the storming of an Amazon store, ultimately settle on the only one perhaps less obvious location.
Arlington, Virginis, will be the host for the company's plan to make a 100% renewable-energy sourced hub called 'HQ2' the site, which Amazon is at pains to paint as a public, community location, not a company campus, will include an extraordinary 'Helix' building and cost a total of around 5 billion dollars.
with early construction already underway and the latest phase - including the Helix - scheduled for completion in 2025, the new site will be a major boost for Arlington, which is expected to benefit to the tune of 25, 000 or so new employees, and a transformed city skyline for the spot not too far from Washington D.C.
As well as 'HQ2' the location will be known as 'PenPlace', and will transform a previously fairly drab neighborhood.
The site will serve in addition to Amazon's current main location in Seattle, with the new site ultimately set to contain 2.8 million square feet of office space, with the latest phase adding three new 22 story buildings.
That Helix focal point jokingly called a 'glass poop emoji' by some commenters, is in fact a really quite beautiful-looking 350ft tall swirling inverted cone, featuring plenty of greenery and some spectacular looking outdoor walkways.
Physical exercise and mental well-being are both emphasized heavily in the intent of the design, which uses the concept of 'biophilia a human desire to connect with nature - in a similar way to the company's series of biodomes at their original headquarters in Seattle.
Lead architect Dale Alberda of the firm NBBJ, previous designers of corporate buildings for the likes of Samsung, Google, and Microsoft, says of the broader space "We're building a series of indoor atriums and gardens that are not a conservatory or a place you just visit, but a place you can actually go and work."
The project is so important to NBBJ they have opened a new office in Washington DC, just to be nearby.
The greenery - which will be tended to by a team of horticulturalists - will be abundant on the inside and outside of the Helix structure where it will enclose a enclose a series of "alternative work environments" for employees to engage in meetings and social calls.
The Helix, though, is not the site of offices themselves - these will be located in more conventional nearby structures.
Instead, it's a kind of escapist hub, where work will be combined with connection to nature and, ideally, the company says in their press releases, a feeling of wellbeing.
Inside there will be a meeting center capacity of more than 1,500 people and an artist in residence scheme in place to assist with the creative side of the community.
It's notable how little Amazon has revealed about the more day-to-day offices, perhaps because they just aren't all that exciting compared to the Helix and the surrounding parklands.
Amazon already owns and rents a number of large office buildings in the area and will essentially expand in a similar way.
The new structure will form a kind of hub for the company's presence in the area, in the otherwise rather drab and conventional Crystal city part of Arlington.
The Helix itself is expected to be open to the public a couple of weekends a month. The green ethos extends to the building's carbon footprint, too.
The entire complex is expected to run on solar energy, but you won't find the solar farm enabling this nearby. Instead, it'll be constructed 200 miles away in Pittsylvania County, South Virginia, with the power transported to Arlington.
Other green energy aspects of the project include a natural ventilation system, and a system to recycle rainwater. All of the new buildings are also designed to maximize the use of sunlight and so reduce the requirements for artificial lighting.
The complex as a whole will be LEED Platinum accredited, the highest certification for sustainable development available from the US Green Building Council.
Many of the features of the complex, in fact, are future-leaning with Amazon making it clear their new development is intended to be a long-term investment and after their New York protest experience, emphasizing the importance of maintaining the support of the community in Arlington as the project develops.
They'll even be assisting in creating 1,300 affordable homes in the area through a further $2 billion dollar fund something cynics might argue the rest of the project - likely to drive up the cost of local housing - otherwise goes emphatically against.
Whatever the impact locally naturally the new site will be a massive boom for Amazon, and the site will plenty of benefits for locals who can afford to stay in the area, too.
The campus is expected to be open to the public in its outdoor spaces, which will come to 2.5 acres of beautiful looking landscaped lawns and gardens.
On-site, you'll find biking trails, bike parking, and charging points for electric cars, as well as lots of non-Amazon businesses amongst the sculptured parkland.
Outside of the Amazon offices themselves, there will also be a 250-seat outdoor concert venue also suitable for screening movies, dog-walking parks, daycare facilities, and spaces to accommodate food trucks.
The ground will be sufficiently varied to even contain their own hiking trails, one of which will circle around the outside of the Helix building.
Farmers markets will be part of the set up, as well as other retail spaces at ground level. In fact, the ground level of the whole system is supposed to make PenPlace feel more like an ultra-modern city block than the headquarters of a huge multinational, with the architects.
Hoping it might not even be clear you're at HQ@ when you walk around. The project essentially rejects the idea of corporate branding, at least externally, in favor of positive community relations.
Designers hope the site could become a tourist attraction, too with downtown Washington across the Pontiac River, just 15 minutes away by subway, making the site close to the capital both appealing to would-be employees and easily accessible to visitors.
With its natural but also hi-tech-looking swirling Helix design very much at the heart of Amazon's plans and what will be the new Arlington skyline, it's perhaps no surprise to learn where the inspiration comes from.
Alberda describes the mix of native plants and manicured gardens that will make up the Helix's swirling outdoor space as: "Drawing its formal inspiration directly from the natural world, where the double helix geometry can be found in many forms, including plants, seashells, DNA strands, and even our galaxy ".
In a world going increasingly for online working, this is also a statement of intent. Unlike some of its rivals, Amazon has recently emphasized the importance of having its employees in physically the same space, for the exchange of ideas and development work.
Pan Place is intended to be just that place. Of course, there are other benefits too not least in the tax breaks and incentives the city of Arlington has offered the corporate behemoth as part of fighting off those 200plus other locations vying to host the multinational.
Tax breaks are thought to total around $573 million, or more than a tenth of the construction outlay, but do depend on Amazon creating 25,000 jobs with an average salary of more than $150,000 in Arlington over the coming years.
The city, we suspect, won't do too badly when it's all added up. New York's planned tax breaks had been still higher, at over 1.5 billion dollars Amazon Headquarters.
But what about the new site?
will it help Amazon's image?
Is it somewhere you'd like to work?
Or is it all just futuristic poop?