Under Armour is roughly 70 times smaller than Amazon by market cap and 25 times smaller by employee count. It's not in the same league as a company like Amazon.
Who said it was?
Under Armour is roughly 70 times smaller than Amazon by market cap and 25 times smaller by employee count. It's not in the same league as a company like Amazon.
> Facebook currently operates AI research centers in Paris, New York City and Menlo Park,
Thanks for tagging that about Facebook and machine learning, Digital Islandboy.
Several other cities, it seems most of the detail being kept under wraps,
http://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/business/article179591851.html
More than 20 sites
https://www.geekwire.com/2017/seattle-region-releases-joint-bid-amazons-second-headquarters/
Greater Seattle, 522 pages, 10 sites
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/business/article179639436.html
Miami, eight sites
I have to agree, the Somerville proposal is much better."In the weeks leading up to the Oct. 19 bid deadline for Amazon HQ2, Boston was widely seen as a leading contender. Now that the city’s official bid has been made public, some question if it is a case of 'Boston. Yes.' or 'Boston: Swing and a Miss.'"
Ouch.
https://www.bisnow.com/boston/news/...hq2-bid-suffolk-downs-or-suffolk-downer-80714
"In the weeks leading up to the Oct. 19 bid deadline for Amazon HQ2, Boston was widely seen as a leading contender. Now that the city’s official bid has been made public, some question if it is a case of 'Boston. Yes.' or 'Boston: Swing and a Miss.',
Ouch.
https://www.bisnow.com/boston/news/...hq2-bid-suffolk-downs-or-suffolk-downer-80714
Real estate prices would skyrocket in and around somerville, Medford, Everett, Revere if Amazon chooses Somerville or Revere. Based on Supply and demand
Real estate prices would skyrocket in and around somerville, Medford, Everett, Revere if Amazon chooses Somerville or Revere. Based on Supply and demand
Never dawned on me that Seattle was going to bid on it too. Talk about "doubling down".
That is downright badass!
.
Agreed! That's awesome.
Can't speak for everyone but I think a lot of angst has to do with "Suffolk Downs......really?" as a lot of people don't consider it a hot property right now unlike the Seaport or Kendall. To paraphrase Pierre Trudeau who said "don't compare me to the Almighty, compare me to the opposition" I too am having some trouble wrapping my mind around that site as the best Boston can do, but you have to line it up with what other cities are proposing. At initial glance I haven't heard of any particular site that blows away everybody else's proposal although admittedly I haven't seen all 240 or so...
Good god could you imagine the traffic impact if they choose Somerville!
probably not but I'd say something could happen with north point.The major, perhaps fatal, flaw in Somerville's bid is that its 'pie in the sky'. There is no commitment from Delaware North or anyone else to build / sell their towers to Amazon.
Amazon apparently wants to own its buildings in HQ2, not lease them. Delaware North may have zero interest in selling a building to Amazon, or Boston Properties, or anyone else with a permitted building for that matter.
Amazon was adamant that the site be ready to go, no zoning hassles, no infrastructure issues related to the site itself (e.g., great site, no utilities), etc. Particularly for the first building, which is why they would take an existing, empty building with 500,000 gsf.
Anyone betting that Somerville's mayor can get Delaware North to sign on the dotted line by January 2018 to sell their office building to Amazon?
If they choose Somerville, it'd be because:
1) Many will bike or walk to work
2) Many will take the Green or Orange
3) The buses from Cambridge will get upgraded.
The major, perhaps fatal, flaw in Somerville's bid is that its 'pie in the sky'. There is no commitment from Delaware North or anyone else to build / sell their towers to Amazon.
Amazon apparently wants to own its buildings in HQ2, not lease them. Delaware North may have zero interest in selling a building to Amazon, or Boston Properties, or anyone else with a permitted building for that matter.
Amazon was adamant that the site be ready to go, no zoning hassles, no infrastructure issues related to the site itself (e.g., great site, no utilities), etc. Particularly for the first building, which is why they would take an existing, empty building with 500,000 gsf.
Anyone betting that Somerville's mayor can get Delaware North to sign on the dotted line by January 2018 to sell their office building to Amazon?