Kraus-Anderson, the longtime Twin Cities construction and real estate firm, said Tuesday that it plans to build a new corporate headquarters building in Minneapolis, a move that will double the firm's employee count downtown.
The new, 100,000-square-foot building will be on the southeast corner of 8th Street and 5th Avenue S. and will replace the firm's low-slung headquarters on the same block that dates to the 1970s. That structure, at 525 S. 8th St., will be torn down.
Once the headquarters is built, the firm may further develop the block with residential units or offices, said Mike Korsh, vice president of Kraus-Anderson Realty. "We are looking for development opportunities for the rest of the block, but it has to be market-driven," he said.
The news comes as several new development projects totaling $1.6 billion on the eastern side of downtown have either been announced or are well underway. It's an area of the city that failed to attract wholesale development in the wake of the Metrodome's opening in 1982, but that is quickly changing in the wake of construction of the new $1 billion Vikings stadium, which is slated to open during the summer of 2016.
Last month, Hennepin County Medical Center announced a $191 million, 322,000-square-foot expansion at its downtown Minneapolis campus that will feature new primary and specialty care clinics, as well as outpatient surgery facilities. The proposed facility, not far from the Kraus-Anderson project, will be on S. 8th Street between Park and Chicago Avenues.
And next Tuesday, developer Ryan Cos. will hold a ceremonial groundbreaking for its $400 million Downtown East project, which includes two 18-story office towers for Wells Fargo & Co., 193 apartments, retail and restaurant space, and a nearly two-block public park. The project also calls for a six-level parking ramp that will be owned by the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority, the public body in charge of the stadium construction.
Construction of the two office towers is already underway, with demolition of the Star Tribune's Freeman Building nearing completion.
At its May 1 meeting, the East Downtown Council voted to support the Kraus-Anderson project. "Their aspirations for the block go beyond their building," said the council's executive director, Dan Collison. "We're pleased they want to consolidate their operations on the site and that they remain committed to downtown. Their current building is not as efficient or attractive or representative of the company they've been in recent years. Their block has been underutilized."