The Vikings showed off Monday their new Eagan headquarters, a project that is the first phase of a massive redevelopment that will give the community an identity for decades to come.
Team execs refer to the project, on the former headquarters of Northwest Airlines, as a world-class facility with a team Hall of Fame, a 6,500-seat stadium for high school football, soccer and lacrosse, as well as an athletic performance building and clinic built and run by Twin Cities Orthopedics to provide treatment from physical therapy to surgery.
In comparing this development to others he's done, Vikings owner and New Jersey real estate mogul Zygi Wilf, called the project "as exciting as they come."
The Vikings' portion of the project, which includes the team and corporate headquarters, a glassy, angular building as well as surrounding fields and the stadium, is 70 percent complete. Four full-size football fields with perfect green grass flank the western side of the white building that will be the new headquarters, replacing the 36-year-old Winter Park, 20 minutes directly west on the interstate in Eden Prairie.
The name of the new headquarters is a mouthful and a sign of the power of naming rights money: Twin Cities Orthopedics Performance Center. In contrast, Winter Park was named after team founder Max Winter.
As the Vikings' campus is underway, Twin Cities Orthopedics (TCO) is speeding to completion of a sports medicine center and surgical clinic. The former sits on the stadium's south side — with views of the field — and a physical therapy and surgical clinic across a parking lot.
It's just the beginning. In the next 15 years, team owners want to develop the remainder of the 200-acre parcel. Prospective projects include offices, hotels, up to 1,000 housing units, retail and restaurants.
Wilf said the new headquarters is a "long time coming" and will bring the team into the 21st century. He and others emphasized how they wanted their new home to be open, welcoming to the community — not just the southeastern suburb but the world.