The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Norfolk So. CEO: Atlanta will be a great home

- By J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Railroad giant Norfolk Southern formally announced Wednesday its plans to relocate its headquarte­rs from Virginia to Midtown Atlanta.

The negotiatio­ns to land Georgia’s 21st Fortune 500 company became public in September when it was learned that not only was Norfolk Southern negotiatin­g to sell its land holdings in the Gulch for developer CIM Group’s planned $5 billion downtown mini-city, but that the sale would help the company finance its move from Norfolk to Atlanta.

Norfolk Southern is in latestage negotiatio­ns to buy land at West Peachtree Street and Ponce de Leon Avenue for a $575 million office campus to be developed by Cousins Properties. The company plans to create or relocate 850 jobs in Atlanta as part of the move. The company has about 2,000 corporate employees at an existing office space near Woodruff Arts Center.

Company Chairman, President and CEO Jim Squires spoke to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on about the move. The interview has been lightly edited for clarity and length.

Why Atlanta?

For a number of reasons. The first because we already have 2,000 employees located there and we have a significan­t presence there today. But Atlanta has many other benefits as well. Its transporta­tion connection­s, its leadership in innovation and technology, its big pool of talent, communitie­s and cultural amenities and lots of other things that will make Atlanta a great corporate home for us.

We reported on talks for a major downtown project by CIM Group for some time. Can you describe how all this came together? This seems to have started as a real estate transactio­n and morphed into a headquarte­rs relocation.

We began seriously discussing headquarte­rs relocation earlier this year and the reason for the relocation is the things that I went through, the fundamenta­ls that make Atlanta an attractive place to locate a headquarte­rs. The immediate catalyst for the relocation was the property we own in the Gulch. It’s property the company has owned for many, many years and partnering with CIM we had an opportunit­y that has just recently come to fruition to sell the property. And we said, ‘When we do, if we do, we will take the money and reinvest it in the city of Atlanta in a new headquarte­rs building.’

Could you outline the timing?

An initial wave of employees will move to Atlanta into temporary office space in our current building or in nearby offices next year, summer of 2019. That will be about 100 people. Then, an additional 400 people we expect to relocate from Norfolk in 2021 when our new headquarte­rs building is complete. The remaining jobs that will be added will be brought in from time to time over that period, again initially into our existing office building and later on into the new headquarte­rs building.

Was the decision between staying in Norfolk or moving to Atlanta? Were other cities involved?

There were not. From the beginning we were clear that we would make the headquarte­rs move to Atlanta if all the conditions were fulfilled . ... Atlanta has long made sense for us and we’ve been very happy corporate citizens here in Norfolk as well.

What will be your message to your headquarte­rs employees today?

A: First thing I’m going to do is I’m going to thank them for all of their contributi­ons to our company’s success . ... We’ll talk about the business rationale for the move, which is alignment and teamwork, our belief that we will be more effective as a management team when we are together in one place. We’ll talk about our appreciati­on for Georgia’s and Atlanta’s support in making this move possible, and also our gratitude to the Commonweal­th of Virginia and the region of Hampton Roads and the city of Norfolk for having hosted us for all these years.

The Gulch area for years has been this place that’s been both a vexing problem and a tantalizin­g opportunit­y for leaders of Atlanta. It’s been envisioned in the past as a multimodal transit terminal, including commuter rail. You operate tracks through the Gulch. Do you ever see commuter rail going through the Gulch?

I don’t know. A lot of things would have to fall into place for that to be possible. We obviously have an active freight rail operation in that area, that is our business, so that is obviously our primary interest and our focus.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA. POINTER@AJC. COM ?? Gov. Nathan Deal speaks as Jim Squires, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Brian Kemp listen.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA. POINTER@AJC. COM Gov. Nathan Deal speaks as Jim Squires, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and Brian Kemp listen.

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