CHS buys back its headquarters building in Inver Grove Heights

$48 million purchase comes six years after CHS sold the campus for $55 million.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
March 5, 2024 at 3:30PM
CHS HQ in Inver Grove Heights, Minn. CHS, Inc. is the company name. It results from a merger of Cenex and Harvest States. Story is slugged COOP0502. CHS, headquartered in Inver Heights, is the countryís top-grossing agriculture co-op. ORG XMIT: MIN2012091216174209
CHS headquarters in Inver Grove Heights. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

CHS Inc. once again owns the Inver Grove Heights headquarters building that has been its home for decades.

Agricultural cooperative CHS paid $48.7 million in cash to a subsidiary of Atlanta-based SunTrust Banks, which bought the corporate campus in 2017 for $55 million, according to state records.

“CHS continues to invest in providing a leading office environment for our employees, and the decision to reacquire the headquarters site aligns with this objective,” a CHS spokesperson said Tuesday. “The purchase made financial sense for CHS, given the company’s long-term commitment to the headquarters site, the city of Inver Grove Heights and the surrounding Twin Cities community.”

The initial sale of the 24-acre property at 550 Cenex Drive included a 20-year lease for CHS to remain as a tenant, and it occurred several months after CEO Jay Debertin was hired.

CHS is in talks with Illinois-based ag cooperative Growmark that could lead to a merger. The building purchase could help ease concerns that such a move might rob the Twin Cities of a Fortune 500 headquarters.

The firm has spent nearly a decade renovating the 340,000-square-foot office to create “a more collaborative work environment for staff to serve member-owners and reflect the judicious approach that their audience, many of them farmers, take in their own business practices,” according to the co-op’s commercial architect partner, BWBR.

CHS is by far the largest employer in Inver Grove Heights and has 1,100 employees at its headquarters. The company offers a mix of in-person, remote and hybrid work arrangements.

The cooperative connects agricultural goods to consumers around the world and had $45.6 billion in revenue last year.

about the writer

Brooks Johnson

Food and Manufacturing Reporter

Brooks Johnson is a business reporter covering Minnesota’s food industry, 3M and manufacturing trends.

See More

More from Business

Light and dark arrows pointing in opposite directions over a file photo of white and black school children in the 1950s.

Minnesota's schools will need to desegregate, more housing will need to be built and even basic assumptions about one another have to change.

card image