U.S. Bank is doubling down on its commitment to downtown Minneapolis.
On Monday, the Minneapolis-based bank said it signed another long-term lease for its headquarters in its namesake tower along Nicollet Mall in Minneapolis. And with that, it will also move hundreds of workers downtown after it vacates the offices it leases in Richfield.
"We have been a company that has had a significant presence in downtown Minneapolis, and it's very important for us to continue that," said Terry Dolan, U.S. Bank's chief administration officer. "We are very committed to the downtown area. It is so critical for the entire metro and the entire Twin Cities area to have a vibrant downtown."
While the decision will reduce the amount of space it occupies in the suburbs, it won't affect the company's headcount or the nearly 450,000 square feet of space it occupies in a 32-story tower at S. 8th Street and Nicollet Mall. Atlanta-based Piedmont Office Realty Trust owns that building, known as the U.S. Bancorp Center.
As the company embraces a more flexible hybrid-work policy it announced last year, Dolan said the company simply needs less space. The company employs about 4,000 people in a couple of locations in downtown Minneapolis and another 2,000 in St. Paul, where the company's leases are also coming due in the next months. Dolan said it's too soon to say what will happen to those offices.
For now, the company said it will vacate 340,000 square feet the company occupies in Richfield's Meridian Crossings and move about 80% of the 1,400 employees who work there to its existing facility at Excelsior Crossings in Hopkins. The remainder will come to downtown Minneapolis.
Collaboration is key
As part of this reshuffle, the company will reconfigure and remodel its workplaces. Rather than adding decked-out workout rooms and new cafeterias as some companies are doing, the company will focus on creating more open, light-filled work spaces that promote interaction among employees, Dolan said.
"We're very committed to bringing our employees back in a co-located sort of way so they can more effectively collaborate in the office," he said. "It's a modernization of space."