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Originally Posted by AllOutOfBubbleGum
I can't believe I'm agreeing with you comrade! You hit all the points why Salt Lake City lacks the political clout to land Amazon. The mayor is terrible at development, the state gov does not like her and most of salt lakes politicians. I worry a lot that Greg (stick up my butt) Hugh's will screw with all of this.
This is a project that the chamber of commerce and the LDS church really makes this happen on 400s. If anybody can kick Hughs to the curb it's them. Cox is also resonable and can see pros and cons, I suggest reaching out to him and tell him how bad Draper is for this.
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I sent a respectful email to Cox last night, and even though I made a few points about why the Draper prison site and the point of mountain in general weren't ideal locations, it was mostly about how ideal the 400 S Main site was.
To an extent, I understand why state leaders want to develop the Draper prison site, and I'm sure it's been on their minds a lot, so when news of HQ2 hit they thought this could be the perfect opportunity. But when it comes down to it, the Draper site is not what Amazon is asking for, and the RFP makes that clear. Although they leave the possibility of a suburban campus open, they still want good transit options, good infrastructure with easy mobility, and proximity to the airport and the center of the urban area. Point of the mountain transit options are as minimal as can be, the infrastructure is lagging considerably--the roads are the most congested place along the Wasatch Front, the infrastructure around the prison for this kind of project isn't even in place yet (which is a problem with a lot of the sites cities around the country will be offering) and it's a considerable distance from the airport and urban center--often more than the times specified in the RFP, when there is congestion. They prefer something that is ready now for this kind of development, Draper isn't even close to ready.
Salt Lake's site not only checks the boxes, it fits everything so perfectly it would be terrible to go with a site that not only can't check several of the boxes, but the ones it does check still pale in comparison to Salt Lake's site.
Also, not sure why that marketwatch article specifies Provo as a great location and not Salt Lake. In the article, he states Omaha, Boise, and Madison don't fit the population criteria. Neither does Provo. The metro population is around 600,000. Even going by the CSA numbers, Amazon still specifies they want to be within 30 minutes from the center of the urban area. The center of the CSA is Salt Lake, and Provo is 45 minutes from Salt Lake on a good day.
I lived in Provo for a long time, and I grew to like it a lot, but it's not ideal for this at all. Salt Lake is a much better fit.