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Amazon Will Likely Begin Headquarters Construction in 2020, City and State Vow Chances for Public Input

Anable Basin today, where Amazon will build its headquarters. (Photo: Nathaly Pesantez)

Nov. 20, 2018  By Nathaly Pesantez

Amazon is likely to begin building out its Long Island City headquarters in 2020, with the city and state both pledging a lineup of opportunities for the public to shape facets of the project well before construction takes off.

The city Economic Development Corporation and Empire State Development, which held a local media briefing on Monday, said a 14-month process is now in the works where the public, by way of meetings, hearings, newly-formed advisory committees and more, will help dictate the buildout of the e-commerce giant’s expansive campus at Anable Basin.

Officials stressed at the briefing, which comes just a week after Amazon officially announced its new headquarter locations to much buzz and criticism over its proceedings, that now begins a “very public conversation” on a campus that Amazon is anticipated to begin moving into in 2022.

“A lot of folks have reacted to this thinking that this is a fully designed project,” said James Patchett, president of NYC EDC. “The truth of the matter is it’s not.”

The 14-month planning process, anticipated to wrap up in early 2020 and with Amazon likely putting shovels on the ground immediately after, will result in the state’s plan that aims to rezone the basin and bring about Amazon’s development, officials said.

The outline, also known as the General Project Plan (GPP), will dictate elements like the size and scope of what the company can actually build on site, along with other uses.

“We need to work with the community to determine where the buildings will go on the sites, how many square feet will actually go there, what the height limits will be, how they’ll be designed, how they’ll be integrated with the community…” Patchett said. “All of that will be part of the conversation.”

The plan also builds on the components already nailed down in Amazon’s upcoming 4 million square foot development, like a school, open space, and a workforce training center, as part of the company’s memorandum of understanding with the city and state.

“In terms of land use, there is no existing design for these sites,” Patchett said.

Included in the months-long planning is an environmental review process, set to start soon and which officials highlight as one of the ways the local community can make their voices heard.

Amazon headquarter location in Long Island City.

The public, like in all environmental review proceedings, can give input on what should be looked at when determining the impact of Amazon’s development on the surrounding neighborhood in areas like infrastructure, noise, air quality, traffic, parking and more.

Input is typically given during public scoping meetings and open comment sections, which will likely kick off in 2019.

Amazon, meanwhile, is expected to hand in a plan within the next two months that will give the state a starting point in how to think of the project’s environmental review process, according to Holly Leicht, ESD executive vice president of real estate development and planning.

While Leicht says Amazon would ostensibly begin construction after the 14-month process ends in 2020, the deal signed with the city and state says the company will commence construction within a year of the GPP’s final approval.

While the environmental review takes shape, the GPP will also begin to be drafted, which will be done in coordination with a soon-to-be-formed Community Advisory Committee—yet another way both city and state say the public will be represented in planning.

This committee, typically established in GPPs, includes local elected officials at the state and city level, like State Sen. Michael Gianaris and Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer—both of whom have opposed several facets of the deal Amazon struck with the city and state. The electeds, additionally, can appoint people to the committee.

Officials say they are in conversations now with elected officials about the committee, and expect its makeup and launch to be finalized within the next week.

City and state officials, along with Amazon representatives, will also head to local community boards to present on plans and milestones “multiple times” and hear feedback over the course of the roughly year-long process.

While the GPP will have its own advisory board, another one will be formed to help steer the Long Island City Infrastructure Fund, one facet of Amazon’s deal with the city and state. The fund is set to receive $650 million from Amazon over the course of 40 years in payments that would otherwise go toward property taxes. The funds, as the name suggests, will go to infrastructure improvements outside of the company’s headquarters, but still within the neighborhood.

The advisory board will also be set up with chairs identified by local electeds. Separate public meetings and forums, additionally, will be held to consider projects that could be aided from the fund.

“It’s very important to us that this be a community focused conversation,” Patchett said.

The city and state made the case for the upcoming public engagement opportunities as the Amazon deal was slammed with criticism from elected officials and locals for its secretive negotiations and use of a state GPP.

Council Member Jimmy Van Bramer (left) and State Senator Michael Gianaris. (Photo: Nathaly Pesantez)

The negotiations and choice to executive a state-run land use process were both viewed by critics as methods to circumvent the public’s input at the local and city level.

“It’s a direct assault on community engagement and consultation on a project that would change the face of Queens,” Van Bramer said leading up to the official Amazon announcement.

The city, however, said Amazon’s decision process was the only private facet of the ordeal, and something they were willing to sign on to given the magnitude and competitiveness of the project, like the rest of the participating cities.

Now, as part of future proceedings, Amazon is expected by both the city and state to be involved in community and even press engagement on its project.

“This project will not be a success unless they are real partners in the community,” Patchett said about Amazon. “It’s their obligation—and we’ll hold them to that—to become real members of the community.”

Amazon’s Anable Basin campus could span up to 8 million square feet and provide around 40,000 jobs over the course of 15 years.

The company will be temporarily occupying 1 million square feet at One Court Square as the buildout along the Long Island City waterfront is underway.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

13 Comments

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George Kelly

No one in Queensbridge fits the worker profile…Do you think AMAZON will hire Black,Puerto Rican ,or any other HOUSING MINORITY FROM THE PROJECTS???NO FRIGGING WAY..ONLY WHITE, ASIAN HIPSTERS NEED APPLY..REALLY..NO CHANCE IN HELL WILL ANY KID FROM ANY OF THE CITY PROJECTS MAKE THE GRADE..WHY???RACE,EDUCATION,SKILLS AND MOST IMPORTANTLY THEY COME FROM THE LARGEST PROJECT IN THE COUNTRY…WHITE HIPSTERS CANT,WON’T,OR TRY TO WORK WITH TRUE CITY KIDS..NO WAY..WON’T HAPPEN..NO MATTER HOW BRIGHT THE APPLICANTS ARE,QUEENSBRIDGE IS PERSONA NON GRATA..FACT..YEAH I’M CLOSED MINDED…MY ASS..I GREW UP HERE..WE ALL KNOW QUEENSBRIDGE AND OTHER PROJECTS TO A TEE..AMAZON ISN’T INTERESTED IN POOR KIDS FROM PROJECTS..SOCIO-ECONOMIC PREJUDICIAL WEST COAST LIBS ONLY…

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George Kelly

My Father was WW2 Vet,my mother raised us until 5…Then she went to work..Then WE went to St Raphaels,Cardinal Hayes High School,Then St.Johns University,with our own money..Not mommy or daddy’s..
My parents were under achievers??No DUMB BELL,ALL MY FRIENDS PARENTS IN SUNNYSUDE JUST GOT BY…UNION MEMBERS JUST WORKING TO PAY RENT,FEED KIDS,GO TO CHURCH…WHY WOULD YOU SAY UNDER ACHIEVERS???YOU NEED TO GET YOUR HISTORY STRAIGHT DUMB BELL..ITS CALLED THE GREATEST GENERATION FOR A REASON..WE WERE LOVED..NOT BABIED…

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Anonymous

theres so much press on how many jobs the people of the Queensbridge projects will get. Those people who want jobs should use these 14 months to get the skills Amazon will be looking for. The average job will be 150k/yr. These aren’t low skill jobs.

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LandLordsloveAmazoninQueens

Sure. Everybody go get an Ivy engineering degree within a year and you might get an interview for a job.

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George Kelly

Oh Ashley,we know it’s not true,BUT yes MANY young ones did get MOMMY and DADDY in Indiana to buy some of you millennial darlings very expensive co-ops and condos in our wonderful Sunnyside.
Yes you will be well off like me one day,BUT the sad truth is,I PUT BLOOD,SWEAT,AND TEARS INTO MY WORK.My mommy and daddy were poor blue collar working people paying rent on 40 STREET their whole lives
So,all you Ashleys out there,praise God mommy and daddy gave you everything.
P.s,I bought my mother her first home when she was 81years old,AND she Cried..MERRY CHRISTMAS TO ALL YOU ASHLEY’S,NOW GET A JOB .

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Progress r us

So George, to put it bluntly. Your parents were under achivers and Ashleys parent were over achivers.

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WouldCyde

This is just a smokescreen to distract us from what’s really important: We need wider bike lanes on Skillman and 43 Ave!

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Ashley

My parents bought me an apartment in Sunnyside when I graduated college last year. This will increase the value. I’m so excited!

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Suncoast

What use is input from a Community Board? A Community Board can only “suggest” and the developers will do what they want. Community Board 2 voted against the installation of bike lanes and DeBlassio built them anyway.

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Jesse

Yup, the community will give input and then the developers will do what they want and the city will let them. I’m sure De Blasio and Cuomo would love to get a few more donations from Bezos. The corruption in our elected “leaders” is disgusting.

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