The Denver Post

Xero’s Americas HQ the first tenant at new Circa Building

- By Joe Rubino

Another day, another office building ribbon cutting in downtown Denver, and another tech company setting down roots in the Mile High City. Developers and dignitarie­s gathered in the lobby of the Circa Building at 1615 Platte St. on Thursday to celebrate the opening of the 96,000squaref­oot commercial space.

The LEED Platinumce­rtified building takes up a pivotal parcel on Platte Street, rising up around the eastern landing spot for the Highland Bridge. Owned by real estate investment firm Unico Properties and developed by Unico subsidiary Costigan Integrated, the fourstory structure has heated bike parking and showers, a 50person auditorium and groundfloo­r common space that includes a private outdoor plaza. It derives just shy of 30 percent of its power from a rooftop solar array provided by another subsidiary, Unico Solar Investors.

Those features helped Circa attract its marquee and so far only operationa­l tenant: the Americas headquarte­rs for cloud accounting software company Xero. It was more than a nice building that lured Xero away from its previous Colorado digs in Greenwood Village.

“We chose Denver to be the Americas HQ for Xero really to help support our growth in the Americas and because we wanted to be part of our thriving tech scene that is building here,” Andy Burner, the company’s vice president of people and business operations, said at Thursday’s event.

So far Xero has about 150 people working in its 30,000squaref­oot, topfloor space.

The company embraces an “activityba­sed working” approach, which forgoes dedicated desks in favor of providing a variety of work spaces that people can utilize as needed. Burner said the space can hold up to 300 people. Twelve employees are slated to start at the Denver office Monday.

While it is maintains a presence in San Francisco, Xero chose to move its HQ from that techheavy city to the Denver area in part because of the local talent being produced here and the talent that continues to flow in from elsewhere, Burner said. When it comes to migrating north from its former Denver Tech Center digs, Burner made it clear the New Zealandbas­ed business sees downtown Denver as the hub for the region’s multispoke tech ecosystem.

“There is a central gravity around the center of Denver, which seems to be building,” Burner said. “It was really about being part of the community and having a visible presence.”

Rather than compete with other firms for talent, Burner said Xero aims to embrace and become a larger part of the local smallbusin­ess community. The company will host the Denver Startup Week closing party later this month. It also recently announced a partnershi­p with Gusto, another company with both Denver and San Francisco offices. Gusto is now the preferred payroll provider for Xero’s accounting and small business services platform.

In a recent study of tech companies and Front Range real estate, researcher­s with CBRE Colorado found at least 22 companies either relocated their headquarte­rs or opened field offices in the area between the summer of 2017 and summer of 2018.

While Boulder and the northern Front Range have long been tech hotbeds, CBRE senior vice presi dent Alex Hammerstei­n said the recent focus has shifted heavily to downtown Denver.

“It’s hard to scale in a place like Boulder or the northwest market where your real estate is constraine­d,” Hammerstei­n said. “The labor base all lives within a very close proximity to downtown.”

Dane Grashuis is among the Xero staffers whose commute got significan­tly shorter now that the company has left Arapahoe County. The downtown Denver denizen knows having a sleek, modern office is going to make the company more attractive to job seekers.

“When I was looking for a job, it was absolutely more of a seller to go into a cool space where people actually wanted to be,” he said.

Xero could soon have neighbors. Austin Kane, regional director for Unico in Colorado, said he hopes to announce a tenant in the coming weeks that will take up the entire second and third floors in the building.

 ?? Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post ?? The roof of Denver’s Circa Building features solar panels. The 96,000squaref­oot commercial space at 1615 Platte St. opened Thursday. The fourstory building has heated bike parking and showers, and a 50person auditorium.
Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post The roof of Denver’s Circa Building features solar panels. The 96,000squaref­oot commercial space at 1615 Platte St. opened Thursday. The fourstory building has heated bike parking and showers, and a 50person auditorium.

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