Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Autos: Adient buys Detroit building.

Firm buys building for HQ

- COREY WILLIAMS

Auto seating supplier Adient, the company that spun off from Milwaukee-based Johnson Controls Inc. earlier this year, announced Wednesday its global headquarte­rs and 500 executive and leadership jobs will be based in downtown Detroit.

Adient also has bought the 10-story Marquette Building for its workers in Detroit’s nearly filled downtown. Corporate functions at sites in Plymouth and other Michigan locations will be consolidat­ed downtown in about two years once renovation­s at the Marquette Building are completed. About 100 of the jobs planned for Detroit will be newly created.

Adient’s decision continues a string of positive developmen­t news for Detroit.

On Tuesday, city officials and business leaders announced that work was set to start on a 410unit residentia­l developmen­t just north of downtown in Detroit’s historic Brush Park. The Detroit Pistons said last week that the profession­al basketball team would return downtown from suburban Auburn Hills to start next season.

A new developmen­t of 218 furnished “microloft” apartments is expected to open downtown next June.

“Adient wanted to build their future in the city,” Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan said. “They could have gone to the suburbs. This sends a message to every major company in America that Detroit is a place where you want to be.”

Adient separated Oct. 31 from Milwaukeeb­ased Johnson Controls. Adient said it will invest about $98 million in Detroit. Of that amount, $75 million is for the acquisitio­n and renovation of the Marquette Building.

A big part of the deal turned out to be the acquisitio­n of a nearby parking garage for Adient employees.

Incentives for the deal, including property tax abatements, must go before the City Council.

Office space in downtown Detroit nearly was filled before Adient decided to move in.

The company said its presence is expected to generate about $17 million in income and property tax revenue for Detroit over the next dozen years.

Some of its workers also could decide to make Detroit’s downtown area home, said R. Bruce McDonald, Adient chair and chief executive.

“Younger people will give it serious considerat­ion,” McDonald said. “We recognize that the next generation of people want to work downtown where the action is.”

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