Let’s talk perspective.
HELLO, APPLE!
Wikipedia
On June 7, 2011, Apple's then-CEO Steve Jobs presented to Cupertino City Council details of the architectural design of the new buildings and their environs. The new campus, on a site now totalling 176 acres (0.71*km2), is planned to house up to 13,000 employees in one central four-storied circular building of approximately 2,800,000 square feet (260,000*m2), which will include a café for 3,000 sitting people, be surrounded by extensive landscaping, and offer parking both underground and in a parking structure.
Apple’s second campus has a whopping 2,800,000 square feet for 13,000 employees. Of course, Amazon’s second campus can have a more condensed cluster of buildings. But, Amazon wants to staff upwards of 50,000 employees. Yikes! How can Boston accommodate a volume such as this?
In my dreams, I would love to see Amazon continue the high spine over the Massachusetts Turnpike with several moderately-sized office buildings containing urban amenities that would benefit their employees and neighboring residents, for example, a grocery store, restaurants and shops and, perhaps, a gym and winter garden. Have to be sensitive to the neighborhoods. Small businesses downtown would salivate over the prospects of potentially 50,000 more customers.
Instead of Massachusetts offering monetary payments to Amazon, have the State offer to build a portion of the Turnpike decking.
I have expressed the opinion before that I think another subway line from the Back Bay down Kneeland Street passing by the Hynes Auditorium, South End Gateway at Back Bay Station, Theater District, South Station, Boston Convention Center, Boston Design Center/Black Falcon Cruise Terminal and on to Logan and, now, possibly, past the Amazon Headquarters, is necessary. Talk about a subway mining gold, I would label it the Gold Line.
The Imagine Boston 2030 plan foresees a lot more housing downtown, anyway. Amazon employees would fall in line wanting this housing, thereby, reducing some of the traffic flow to headquarters.
As a Republican, Governor Charlie Baker wouldn’t spend money on a big-ticket item. He might if Amazon insists on better transportation in downtown Boston.
The State keeps wringing their hands about not having enough money for big transportation projects and, yet, polls show that Massachusetts residents support a tax to reduce traffic congestion. Los Angeles and Denver residents voted for a sales tax many years ago and now have extensive rail systems.
What politician wouldn’t want to spend money that citizens approve of?