Edward Jones draws up $260 million expansion
St. Louis Business Journal - 10:44 AM CDT Wednesday
by James Goodwin
Edward Jones plans to create at least 1,000 jobs in the next decade and build up to $260 million worth of office space and parking garages in St. Louis County in the next five years in a move spurred by state and county incentives and projected company growth.
A formal announcement is to be made at an 11:30 a.m. news conference attended by Gov. Matt Blunt and company officials.
Half the jobs, which will include service and operations positions, will come in the next five years. The company plan, which is to be announced at a news conference today, centers primarily on Edward Jones' Maryland Heights campus but also includes the company's headquarters in Des Peres.
The state, for its part, has approved $10 million in funding to help reconstruct the Interstate 270/Dorsett Road interchange in Maryland Heights by 2011 and has tentatively approved the issuance of $7 million in revenue bonds that Edward Jones would buy for tax credits. Additionally, Edward Jones will receive almost $4 million in state jobs incentives.
The company also is negotiating with St. Louis County to receive $30.5 million in tax abatements for improvements made between 2007 and 2011. The county has already agreed to forego about $8 million worth of sales tax revenue on construction materials.
"This is a terrific partnership between government and private enterprise that will help Edward Jones accommodate anticipated continued growth while greatly enhancing the economic vitality of the entire St. Louis region," James Weddle, managing partner of Edward Jones, said in a prepared statement.
Edward Jones says state help was key to the expansion, which will include construction of:
* Three buildings totaling 650,000 square feet of office space, and parking garages at the company's North Campus, east of I-270 and south of Dorsett Road in Maryland Heights. The structures, which will replace buildings dating back to the 1960s, should be finished by the end of 2011.
* A 250,000-square-foot office building and a parking garage at the Edward Jones headquarters, aka South Campus, at Manchester and Ballas roads in Des Peres.
"We're expecting there will be significant growth in the next years as this big bulge of baby boomers gets into that retirement age," company spokesman John Boul said. "... It's fueling our growth, and we have a need to support it from our home office."
Edward Jones, which ranks 23rd on the Business Journal's 2006 list of largest employers, counts about 3,500 employees at its campuses in Maryland Heights, Des Peres and Creve Coeur. Another 500 employees work at area branch offices in Missouri and Illinois.
Boul said the new construction might impact the Creve Coeur site, located at Maryville Centre, but likely would not affect operation centers in Tempe, Ariz., Canada or the United Kingdom.
The new interchange at I-270 and Dorsett Road is expected to cost $30 million. Maryland Heights has committed $6.15 million between 2009 and 2011, and St. Louis County will give $5.1 million, according to Edward Jones. A federal allocation of $1.8 million is already in place. The state will fund the remaining $16.95 million.
Edward Jones would contribute $2 million to relocate American Industrial Drive in Maryland Heights for the North Campus project. Maryland Heights and Des Peres have yet to sign off on the respective components.
jamesgoodwin@bizjournals.com
St. Louis Business Journal - 10:44 AM CDT Wednesday
by James Goodwin
Edward Jones plans to create at least 1,000 jobs in the next decade and build up to $260 million worth of office space and parking garages in St. Louis County in the next five years in a move spurred by state and county incentives and projected company growth.
A formal announcement is to be made at an 11:30 a.m. news conference attended by Gov. Matt Blunt and company officials.
Half the jobs, which will include service and operations positions, will come in the next five years. The company plan, which is to be announced at a news conference today, centers primarily on Edward Jones' Maryland Heights campus but also includes the company's headquarters in Des Peres.
The state, for its part, has approved $10 million in funding to help reconstruct the Interstate 270/Dorsett Road interchange in Maryland Heights by 2011 and has tentatively approved the issuance of $7 million in revenue bonds that Edward Jones would buy for tax credits. Additionally, Edward Jones will receive almost $4 million in state jobs incentives.
The company also is negotiating with St. Louis County to receive $30.5 million in tax abatements for improvements made between 2007 and 2011. The county has already agreed to forego about $8 million worth of sales tax revenue on construction materials.
"This is a terrific partnership between government and private enterprise that will help Edward Jones accommodate anticipated continued growth while greatly enhancing the economic vitality of the entire St. Louis region," James Weddle, managing partner of Edward Jones, said in a prepared statement.
Edward Jones says state help was key to the expansion, which will include construction of:
* Three buildings totaling 650,000 square feet of office space, and parking garages at the company's North Campus, east of I-270 and south of Dorsett Road in Maryland Heights. The structures, which will replace buildings dating back to the 1960s, should be finished by the end of 2011.
* A 250,000-square-foot office building and a parking garage at the Edward Jones headquarters, aka South Campus, at Manchester and Ballas roads in Des Peres.
"We're expecting there will be significant growth in the next years as this big bulge of baby boomers gets into that retirement age," company spokesman John Boul said. "... It's fueling our growth, and we have a need to support it from our home office."
Edward Jones, which ranks 23rd on the Business Journal's 2006 list of largest employers, counts about 3,500 employees at its campuses in Maryland Heights, Des Peres and Creve Coeur. Another 500 employees work at area branch offices in Missouri and Illinois.
Boul said the new construction might impact the Creve Coeur site, located at Maryville Centre, but likely would not affect operation centers in Tempe, Ariz., Canada or the United Kingdom.
The new interchange at I-270 and Dorsett Road is expected to cost $30 million. Maryland Heights has committed $6.15 million between 2009 and 2011, and St. Louis County will give $5.1 million, according to Edward Jones. A federal allocation of $1.8 million is already in place. The state will fund the remaining $16.95 million.
Edward Jones would contribute $2 million to relocate American Industrial Drive in Maryland Heights for the North Campus project. Maryland Heights and Des Peres have yet to sign off on the respective components.
jamesgoodwin@bizjournals.com









