Business & Tech

Detroit-Area Gets Amazon Center; Mayor Duggan Taps Gilbert To Get HQ

The billionaire Quicken Loans founder vacations in the same spot as the billionaire founder of the online retail giant.

DETROIT, MI — Dan Gilbert, the founder and chairman of Quicken Loans, has been tapped by the Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan to lead the city’s effort to land a second headquarters for online retailing giant Amazon. Gilbert’s first task will be to recruit a panel of top regional civic and business leaders to formulate the proposal that will be sent off to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos.

And, Detroit certainly is on Amazon's radar. The company announced today that it would have a new fulfillment center in Shelby Township. That center, to open next year, will have 1,000 employees.

"Michigan has been a great place to do business for Amazon and we look forward to adding a new fulfillment center to better serve our customers in the region," said Sanjay Shah, Amazon's vice president of North American operations.

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Since 2016, Amazon has announced multiple facilities in Michigan including three fulfillment centers and one "sortation" center in Livonia, Romulus, Brownstown and the Charter Township of Shelby, as well as a corporate office in Detroit. The new fulfillment center will bring Amazon’s workforce in Michigan to more than 3,500.

Detroit Regional Chamber of Commerce CEO Sandy Baruah told the Detroit Free Press that the team could be assembled within two days. Many local officials, citing the renaissance that has occurred in the city’s downtown, say Detroit is ripe to land such economic development jewel.

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And, indeed, it would be a gem.

Amazon announced last week it would spend more than $5 billion to build another HQ in North America that would house some 50,000 employees. The new operation would be in addition to its current operation in Seattle, which has 33 buildings, 23 restaurants and 40,000 employees. (For more local news, click here to sign up for real-time news alerts and newsletters from Detroit Patch, and click here to find your local Michigan Patch. If you have an iPhone, click here to get the free Patch iPhone app.)

Among the requirements: The retailer wants to be near a metropolitan area with more than a million people; be able to attract top technical talent; be within 45 minutes of an international airport; have direct access to mass transit; and be able to expand that headquarters to as much as 8 million square feet in the next decade.

As for turning to Gilbert to lead the charge? That makes sense, writes the Free Press, noting that Duggan "is smart to let two billionaires (Gilbert and Bezos) come together in this effort to possibly do something unexpected, something monumental for an American city." The Free Press also notes that Gilbert and Bezos have a vacation spot in common.

Gilbert also owns the Cleveland Cavaliers. In that city, officials have remained mum on whether they will pursue Amazon's second headquarter. Meanwhile, cities across the nation, including Boston, Chicago, Denver and Pittsburgh.

Duggan told the Free Press that the city wants one proposal from metropolitan Detroit that would include input from across the region, including the suburbs. “We’re going to try to put together the broadest coalition we can,” Duggan told the Free Press. He also noted that unlike

One thing that is unique is: There is the ability to build several million square feet of office space in downtown Detroit in a series of buildings woven into downtown. That’s an opportunity that they’re not going to find in any downtown in any other city in the country. So the concept that Amazon has, a campus woven into an urban community, is one that Detroit is uniquely positioned to offer.”

Read the full story in the Detroit Free Press.

Image by Gene J. Puskar/AP

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