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GM plans to launch a large-scale renovation this summer at its Detroit headquarters, the Renaissance Center. The 120,000-square-foot renovation calls for extending the section of the front complex ...
General Motors Co. plans this summer to launch a large-scale renovation of its Detroit headquarters, the Renaissance Center. The 120,000-square-foot renovation will include an addition to extend ...
While some people will scale towers to help get free publicity for a political cause ... GM purchased Renaissance Center in 2008 for $626 million after leasing the property from its previous ...
General Motors has finalized updates for improvements to the Renaissance Center. News; ... Avenue will also be installed so People Mover riders can ... GM will also add an extra 8,000 ...
General Motors announced Tuesday that the GM Renaissance Center, the six-tower office complex that dominates Detroit's skyline and has its own ZIP code, now recycles, reuses or converts all its ...
GM will relocate to a modern office building about a mile north of the Renaissance Center along a stretch of road that now houses high-end shops and restaurants.
Now that part of Detroit’s Renaissance Center may be demolished, a story once told to me by legendary mall builder A. Alfred Taubman comes to mind. Taubman was friends with Henry Ford II, the ...
GM still has some employees based in the Renaissance Center, but just a fraction of the 6,000 or so it had stationed there pre-pandemic, according to Crain’s data.
The GM Renaissance Center, a staple of Detroit’s skyline, is slated for a $1.6 billion overhaul and hinges on $250 million in public funding.
Monday, GM announced it plans to move less than a mile away to the new Hudson site which is under construction. According to the automaker, the Renaissance Center is 5.5 million square feet.
Barra said GM had hired a lot of people during COVID-19, noting that 40% of GM's technical talent has been with the company less than five years, so "we had people who had never been in the office." ...
GM had been slowly and quietly disappearing from the RenCen for years, shifting more of its workforce to its Tech Center in Warren while building up white-collar workforces in places where people ...