Amazon proposes new Seattle digs

The Seattle Times

Earlier this week, Amazon.com proposed its three-block high-rise office complex in Seattle’s Denny Triangle. If approved, the project could take up to eight years to complete. The preliminary design of the complex comprises 3.3 million square feet, potentially making it the biggest development downtown Seattle has ever seen.

So how did Amazon evolve from online bookseller to what some experts consider “the best strategic player in tech”? Venkatesh Rao, contributor to Forbes, pins the company’s slow but sure rise in the dismantling of the bookselling industry in 1994 and its strategic decision to diversify. Amazon has since become the world’s biggest online retailer of a gamut of products — new and used books, digital software and information, toys, food, electronics, apparel, and more. Headquartered in Seattle, the company hosts customized websites for the U.S., Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan, India, and China.

Already, Amazon’s presence in Seattle is felt. The South Lake Union neighborhood has gotten a serious makeover. The New York Times reported that at the end of 2011, Amazon employed 56,000 people nationwide, up 67% from 2010. The growth has helped drive down office vacancy. In the fourth quarter of 2011, the rate dropped to 12.4 percent from 13.6 percent at the close of 2010, according to Kidder Matthews, a commercial brokerage in Seattle. The firm expects that rate to fall into the single digits by the close of this year. Residential housing has also gotten a boost. When new condo listings appear in the South Lake Union market, they tend not to sit for long. At this rate, Amazon’s projected growth will continue to up the demand for housing, amenities, and other retail businesses.

Harvest festivities

applesWhen the leaves turn color and the air feels crisp, harvest time has arrived. And that means pumpkin patches, corn mazes, and haunted houses.

Take time this month for some of these festivities before fall is over:

  • Leavenworth is known to be the next best thing to Munich, Germany! If you’re craving a taste of German food and spirits or simply want to take part in recreational and cultural activities around town, Leavenworth is worth a day or weekend trip.
  • Remlinger Farm in Carnation features a u-pick pumpkin field, corn mazes, fresh produce for sale, and children‘s rides at their month-long Fall Pumpkin Harvest Festival. Weekend hours 10 ““ 6. 
  • If you are craving apples, you might check out the Apple Festival at Lattin‘s Country Cider Mill and Farm. Located in Olympia, the Cider Mill boasts all things apple (cider, caramel apples, apple butter, pie, fritters) and two haunted houses.
  • And if you‘re keen on picking, baking, or canning your own fruit, go to PickYourOwn.org to view detailed listings of orchards around the state.

Buyers search for homes on the go

Home IconSince January of this year, Realtor.com’s iPhone app for searching homes has been downloaded 1 million times (according to Inman News).

The Realtor.com iPhone application includes handy features such as mobile access to 4 million listings, one-touch call capability to the listing agent of the property, synchronization with one’s Realtor.com account for better storage and filing of home searches, and perhaps best of all, directions to the site using iPhone’s GPS system. 

Typically, iPhone users fall into the age range of 26 – 40, meaning that applications like those created by Realtor.com or Zillow.com are proving to be key utilities for many new and tech-savvy homebuyers.

How Large is your doghouse?