Business & Tech
$200 Million Amazon Center Coming To Oak Creek
Local officials signed off on a deal that will reportedly bring 1,500 new jobs to the area by 2021.

OAK CREEK, WI -- Move over Ikea, Oak Creek has landed an even larger fish. Officials in Oak Creek scored a huge development win Tuesday night, finalizing a deal to bring a $200 million Amazon fulfillment center to the city with the promise of 1,500 new full-time jobs by the end of 2021.
“Amazon has selected a great location close to I-94 that makes perfect sense for our community from a land use planning standpoint. Amazon will become the City’s largest employer and contribute significantly to our tax base, helping the City to continue to keep taxes low and services high for our residents," Oak Creek Mayor Dan Bukiewicz said.
In the agreement between the City and Amazon.com Services, Inc., Amazon committed to investing $100 million in property improvements and $100 million of personal property installed in the facility. In addition, Amazon guaranteed to create a minimum of 1,500 full-time jobs with annual gross wages of $40 million by the end of 2021.
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The four-story, 2.6 million square foot structure will be built in the new Ryan Business Park in the City of Oak Creek, adjacent to the I-94/Ryan Road interchange.
Officials said the Amazon site will be developed and owned by an affiliate of Hillwood Development, LLC, and leased to Amazon. The City of Oak Creek established a new tax increment district for the business park earlier this year.
Find out what's happening in Oak Creekfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
As part of a tax increment package, Hillwood will fund infrastructure costs, estimated at $13.4 million, mostly related to rebuilding the intersection of 13th Street and Highway V, as well as improvements to Ryan Road. Officials said Oak Creek would refund Hillwood for roadway and utility costs, and up to $3.5 million of reimbursable costs to ready the site for development, through new property taxes collected from the development.
“From the City’s perspective, being in a position where we did not have to borrow for these infrastructure upgrades was the most important factor in the Council’s decision to move forward. The deal structure is a reimbursement model, with the infrastructure costs being reimbursed only through taxes generated by the Amazon site, not the general taxpayers of the City,” City Administrator, Andrew J. Vickers said in a statement late Tuesday.
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