The Denver Post

City Council considers $1.5 million of incentives for business at Storagetek site.

- By Joe Rubino Joe Rubino: 303-954-2953, jrubino@denverpost.com or @rubinojc

The mystery of who has been eyeing a prime piece of Louisville commercial real estate for a major new corporate outpost has been solved.

The company is Medtronic, the world’s largest manufactur­er of insulin pumps, catheters and other medical devices, and the Louisville City Council on Tuesday will discuss whether or not to offer $1.5 million in incentives to lure it to town.

Medtronic employs about 2,000 people in the metro area, according to a staff summary included in this week’s Louisville City Council agenda. It is looking to relocate those workers and add 500 to 1,000 more at a new campus over the next several years. It is considerin­g a chunk of land northwest of the U.S. 36-Northwest Parkway interchang­e in southern Louisville for that project, according to that summary.

The property is the former corporate home of data storage firm Storagetek. A decade ago, Conocophil­lips was planning a state-of-the-art energy research lab there with 7,000 jobs, but the project never materializ­ed. Today is it owned by Phillips 66, which has been trying to sell it and now has a contract with a potential buyer.

This past summer, Denver developmen­t firm Brue Baukol Capital Partners submitted plans to the city detailing an unnamed company’s desire to build a new corporate campus on the center portion of the property.

Louisville has competitio­n. Medtronic, based in Dublin, Ireland, but with an operations headquarte­rs in Minneapoli­s, is eyeing sites in Minnesota, Tennessee and other states for the project, a staff memo says.

The staff is recommendi­ng that the City Council approve a tax rebate package worth slightly less than $1.5 million to support the project.

That’s more than 40% of about $3.5 million in fees and taxes the project is expected to bring into the city if built.

In total, the campus could result in as much as 500,000 square feet of new constructi­on by the end of 2022, and cost $133 million, including furniture and equipment. Louisville is home to 500 Medtronic employees at other facilities today, the staff memo says, but the project could bring an additional 2,300 to 2,500 jobs to the city. The average worker at the campus would make $100,000 to $150,000, better than the Boulder County average.

Tuesday’s meeting is scheduled to begin at 7 p.m. at Louisville City Hall, 749 Main St.

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