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Amazon apparently knew for months that it would split up its second headquarters (AMZN)

Amazon will develop its HQ2 in two different locations. And, according to several reports, that decision was made several months ago.

  • The company originally said it would select one city for its new headquarters.
  • According to Amazon senior vice president Jay Carney, who spoke with The New York Times, the decision to split HQ2 was made months ago.

For over a year, Amazon has kept the search for its second headquarters, dubbed HQ2, very secret, leaving the public and even the cities who had made proposals to live off rumors alone.

On November 5, The Wall Street Journal reported that Amazon was considering splitting its headquarters in two. That was the first time a solution of this kind had been reported, but according to an Amazon executive, it had been in the works for months.

Jay Carney, a senior vice president at Amazon, told The New York Times that the decision to split HQ2 was made during a meeting in August. The team running the search decided that it would be easier to find the 50,000 employees that they intended to hire if they split the office between two locations.

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An Amazon spokesperson later told The Times that that decision had been made in September. The company did not immediately respond to Business Insider's request for comment.

On Wednesday, The Wall Street Journal reported that some city officials may have had their suspicions that Amazon could split HQ2, even before it was officially announced.

"During a second visit in Los Angeles, a city official asked whether Amazon should break up HQ2 among several cities because there wasn't enough tech talent in one location. Ms. Sullivan and her staff appeared to give each other knowing glances," The Journal wrote.

Holly Sullivan is the Amazon exec who led the search for HQ2.

Amazon reiterated this in its blog post announcing the selections on Tuesday.

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"We can recruit more top talent by being in two locations," the company said. "These are fantastic cities that attract a lot of great talent."

It would also allow Amazon to

These problems have been highlighted at Amazon's main headquarters in Seattle, where locals complain of skyrocketing rents, prolonged construction, gentrification, and gridlock traffic.

  • Amazon officially announces its HQ2 will be split between New York and Virginia
  • Amazon finally explains why it's cutting its second headquarters in half
  • Arlington, Virginia, lured in Amazon with promises of a helipad and a cash grant of up to $550 million
  • New York City has lured Amazon with more than $1.5 billion in incentives — here's what else they agreed to
  • We walked around Long Island City, the New York neighborhood where Amazon is planning to bring HQ2, and saw why it'd be appealing to the e-commerce giant

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