Thomson Reuters' hunt for a new home took more than a year after the Canadian business services and media conglomerate decided to downsize.
And in the end, the company only ended up moving four miles away, though it did cut about 800,000 square feet.
"We found the perfect solution for our needs and what employees are looking for," said Tom Walrath, vice president of global real estate and facilities. "We're very fortunate and we couldn't be happier."
The company said Thursday it signed a lease for 300,000 square feet of nearly new space at 2900 Ames Crossing Road in Eagan, adjacent to TCO Performance Center, the Minnesota Vikings' practice facility. It is also the address for Prime Therapeutics, which made its recently completed corporate campus available for sublease late last year.
Prime and Thomson are among several major companies in the Twin Cities trying to pare down, which is resulting in a reshuffling of the commercial real estate scene across the Twin Cities. Not long after Prime made its announcement, Thomson officially launched its search for a smaller space.
The official search for a new space began in December 2021, but long before that it was clear to Thomson that it had more space than it needed.
Walrath said the company was using only about 75% of the more than 1 million square feet of space the company built nearly three decades earlier. In January, the company hired a broker and listed 179 acres of its 263-acre campus, which is at 610 Opperman Drive in Eagan.
A recently adopted hybrid work strategy has guided Thomson's space needs, Walrath said. The strategy focuses on employee flexibility and requires that most employees be in the office two to three days a week. Some are fully remote.