Ford to Relocate HQ After Nearly 70 Years in Dearborn

For the first time in nearly 70 years, Ford Motor Company is relocating its world headquarters. The automaker announced that its new 2.1-million-square-foot campus in Dearborn, Michigan, will open in November, just three miles from its current location.

The new site will carry the official name “Ford World Headquarters” and sit within a larger complex called the Henry Ford II World Center, honoring the founder’s grandson.

End of the Glass House Era

Since 1956, Ford’s headquarters has stood at 1 American Road in Dearborn, in the building famously known as the Glass House. Once considered one of the largest office buildings in the U.S. occupied by a single company, it will be vacated and demolished by 2027.

“When we move to the new headquarters, the 1 American Road address will move with it, because we’re going to continue to develop products for the next century,” said Ted Ryan, Ford’s heritage and brand manager.

Designed for Collaboration

The new campus is built around a modern, collaborative work culture. It will bring 14,000 employees within a 15-minute walk of the main building, featuring six design studios, more than 300 tech-enabled meeting rooms, a 160,000-square-foot food hall, wellness spaces, and family-friendly amenities.

Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford emphasized the headquarters’ role in talent recruitment.

“To attract the best talent, you have to give them interesting problems to work on and great places to work,” he said. “We feel they have interesting things to work on, but we didn’t have great places for them to work — and now we do. It’s a talent-attraction magnet.”

Historic Roots

The new headquarters sits on the site of the former Product Development Center, inaugurated in 1953 with a live broadcast from President Dwight Eisenhower. Legendary vehicles, including the Mustang, Thunderbird, and F-Series trucks, were developed there.

Ford’s move comes as rival General Motors also prepares to relocate its headquarters, leaving its iconic Detroit riverfront tower for new downtown offices.

Dearborn’s bond with Ford remains central. “Dearborn and Ford are almost synonymous. If you think of Dearborn, you think of Ford, and if you think of Ford, you think of Dearborn,” Ryan said. “Henry Ford was born just a few miles from the headquarters where we sit now. … There have been multiple Ford family members who, as they walk in and they see the blue oval with ‘Ford’ on the side of the building, they’re really walking into their family home.”

Soon, that family home will enter its next chapter as Ford begins a new era at its modernized world headquarters.

Lucas Durden

Guest Writer

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