According to the email, 3,500 of Target's 8,500 downtown Minneapolis employees who were working in City Center prior to the coronavirus pandemic will be given a "home base" in one of the company's other headquarter buildings in the city or its Brooklyn Park Campus.
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Just how different the post-pandemic world of work will look came into greater focus on Thursday when Target Corp. announced that it will move out of City Center, a major downsizing that will reduce its office space in downtown Minneapolis by a third.
Target, the largest employer downtown, said it no longer needs the nearly 1 million square feet it occupies in that skyscraper as it plans for a hybrid future in which workers will combine remote and on-site work. It made the decision even with 10 more years left on its lease.
The company s exit from City Center will leave a gaping hole, since it takes up about two-thirds of the 51-story tower. All of Target s offices have been mostly empty in the past year as the company, like many, sent employees home to slow the spread of COVID-19. About 3,500 of Target s 8,500 downtown Minneapolis employees worked in City Center before the pandemic.