Target Corporation's west campus along Interstate 394 is the latest casualty of the retailer's downsizing.
On Thursday morning, executives told the site's 1,300 employees that the nine-story tower near the western edge of Minneapolis will go up for sale this fall. Those workers, who are mostly in financial and retail services such as Redcard and customer relations, will move next summer to the company's recently expanded Brooklyn Park campus, about 15 miles away.
Target has laid off about a fifth of its corporate staff in the Twin Cities earlier this year, leaving it with a lot of empty office space. "The great news is that they're not moving [those operations] to Texas — or to India," said Jeff Lunde, the mayor of Brooklyn Park. "So we're happy to be part of this and to keep those people here."
Target had already begun moving employees, about a hundred or so at a time, from its downtown headquarters along Nicollet Mall to Brooklyn Park, Lunde said.
The Minneapolis-based retailer opened its northern campus in 2001. Last year, it completed two towers at the site, doubling its office space there to 1.2 million square feet.
Target officials have said they would move about 3,000 employees from downtown to Brooklyn Park once the expansion was ready. But currently, only about 2,000 employees work there, along with a number of contractors.
Target's Brooklyn Park offices could host about 6,000 workers and house a lot of Target's technology operations as well as functions such as human resources, finance, asset protection and sourcing.
With those changes, many had questioned the future of the west campus, as a Target executive acknowledged Thursday in an e-mail to employees obtained by the Star Tribune.