Located next to the Mississippi River in Moline, Ill., the new IH Mississippi Valley Credit Union (IHMVCU) headquarters has completed construction. The LEO A DALY-designed building was designed to reflect an employee-centered culture.
The 92,000-sf facility consolidates about 300 employees from other locations and serves as the center of operations among the company’s 13 locations in Western Illinois and Eastern Iowa. A three-story atrium faces the Mississippi River and uses its sweeping views of the river valley to encourage occupants to take the stairs. The atrium is illuminated by a digital multiplex system that expresses the IHMVCU brand through LED lighting. The lighting can also be changed to reflect special occasions such as turning red, white, and blue on the Fourth of July.
The building’s nearly translucent north facade and punched windows on the other three building faces (which together use more than 600 panes of glass) make interior daylighting possible. Headquarters amenities include a fitness area, cafe, indoor and outdoor community spaces, lounges, fireplaces, and supplies for post-workday events or entertaining clients.
See Also: New social campus for innovators, tech leaders covers a full city block
LEO A DALY led all design services for the project, including architecture, interior design, and electrical, mechanical, and structural engineering.
Related Stories
Office Buildings | Apr 8, 2019
Denver office building features 13,000 sf green roof
Dynia Architects designed the building.
Office Buildings | Apr 5, 2019
2019 trends in the workplace
From retention and career advancement to the ethics of inclusion and diversity, these five trends will play a major role this year in design, strategic planning and workplace development.
Industrial Facilities | Mar 10, 2019
The burgeoning Port San Antonio lays out growth plans
Expansions would accommodate cybersecurity, aerospace, and defense tenants, and help commercialize technologies.
Office Buildings | Mar 6, 2019
How to leverage design and culture’s two-way relationship for better workplaces
The relationship between workplace design and company culture isn’t all that different from a tango.
Office Buildings | Feb 15, 2019
A healthier perspective: Office developers bet on wellness amenities to attract top-notch tenants
Owners and developers are driving demand for wellness features and practices—active stairways, biophilia, enhanced air quality, etc.—as one more way draw tenants.
Office Buildings | Feb 15, 2019
Vancouver’s new office building will be a stack of reflective boxes
OSO and Merrick Architecture designed the building.
Office Buildings | Feb 11, 2019
Real-world wellness pays off
3form, a materials manufacturer, did a top-to-bottom remodel of its Salt Lake City headquarters campus that included adding a 14,500-sf gym.
Office Buildings | Feb 5, 2019
Duluth Trading Company moves to new HQ building
Plunkett Raysich Architects designed the project.
Interior Architecture | Jan 14, 2019
To get more involved earlier in projects, a leading furniture dealer launches a firm for commercial interiors construction
Vantis is positioned to integrate design with offsite customized fabrication.
Office Buildings | Jan 11, 2019
Open offices are bad!
The Harvard studies on the unintended effects of open office defines it as space where 'one entire floor was open, transparent and boundaryless… [with] assigned seats,' and the other had 'similarly assigned seats in an open office design, with large rooms of desks and monitors and no dividers between people's desks.'