Amazon is in advanced talks about putting Amazon’s second headquarters, commonly referred to as HQ2, in the Crystal City neighborhood of Arlington County, Virginia, according to the Washington Post.

The larger D.C. area was considered a likely candidate for HQ2 due to its proximity to CEO Jeff Bezos’s home and, more importantly, federal lawmakers. Three of Amazon’s 20 finalists were located there — Washington D.C., Montgomery County and Northern Virginia — suggesting the place had a better chance than others.

Here’s what we know about the area:

  • Arlington County is home to about 230,000 people and has seen a 13 percent population increase in the last decade, according to the Census Bureau. For comparison, that’s about the same as Madison, Wisconsin or Scottsdale, Arizona.
  • Its median home sales price, $553,000, is much higher than the national median of $220,000 according to residential real estate company Trulia. Still, that’s cheaper than the $685,000 median home price in Seattle, where Amazon’s current headquarters is based.
  • Its cost for office space is cheaper than the national average. In Northern Virginia, top-of-the-line central office space costs $35.40 per square foot — lower than the national average of $37.35 and Seattle’s average of $38.73, according to Q2 2018 estimates by commercial real estate company Cushman & Wakefield.
  • At 19.4 percent, its vacancy rate for Class A office space is also higher than the U.S. average of 12.3 percent, meaning that it will be easier than average for Amazon to lease space there. It’s much more difficult to find office space in Seattle, whose vacancy rate is under 8 percent.
  • It’s an 11 minute metro ride from downtown Crystal City to Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, the preferred D.C. airport. That’s faster than most other HQ2 cities. It takes about 22 minutes by car — without traffic — and nearly 50 minutes by mass transit to reach the Seattle airport from Amazon’s original headquarters.
  • Crystal City is also an 11 minute drive to Capitol Hill without much traffic.
  • The average wage for tech talent in nearby D.C. is $111,111 a year — the second most expensive finalist city after New York, according to real estate research company CBRE. It’s a little less than the $117,000 a year tech workers are paid in Seattle.
  • D.C. ranked third among U.S. cities as the best place for tech talent, in CBRE’s annual roundup. Seattle ranked No. 2 this year.
  • It’s near numerous higher education institutions, including Georgetown, George Washington and American universities.

Discover more from

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading