Caterpillar to move headquarters to Texas, marking second major corporate departure from Illinois in 6 weeks
Chicago Tribune · Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/TNS

Less than six weeks after defense contractor and airplane-maker Boeing announced it would move its global headquarters out of downtown Chicago, leaders of another major corporation are set to leave the region.

Longtime Illinois company Caterpillar Inc. will move its headquarters from Deerfield, Illinois, to an existing office in Irving, Texas, outside Dallas, the company said Tuesday.

“We believe it’s in the best strategic interest of the company to make this move, which supports Caterpillar’s strategy for profitable growth as we help our customers build a better, more sustainable world,” Caterpillar Chairman and CEO Jim Umpleby said in a statement.

The move means the majority of the roughly 230 employees based at the mining and construction equipment-maker’s Deerfield office are expected to relocate to Texas over time, Caterpillar spokeswoman Kate Kenny said.

The transition will begin this year. Kenny did not provide a specific time frame for the move, but said the company has a lease for its Deerfield office that will “allow for an orderly and flexible transition for our employees,” and company leaders will work with employees individually.

Caterpillar has offices and manufacturing locations throughout Illinois, including an office in Chicago, and Kenny said the move will not affect any other Chicago-area locations. Illinois is expected to remain the largest concentration of Caterpillar employees in the world, with more than 17,000 employees in the state, most of them near Peoria.

“The global competitive and market environments we face as a company are always changing, and we continuously evaluate and update our global footprint, including office locations, to best serve our business and talent needs,” Kenny said in an email.

The company is the latest to shrink its footprint in the Chicago area amid corporate relocations and an office market reeling from two years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Boeing is moving its headquarters to Arlington, Virginia, and has said it will cut office space but continue to employ hundreds of people in Chicago. Earlier, in 2018, Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. announced it would close its Deerfield headquarters.

More recently, other companies have sold office space as many employees have worked remotely during the pandemic. Insurance giant Allstate reached an agreement in late 2021 to sell its longtime headquarters near Northbrook, and recently health care company Baxter said it was selling its longtime Deerfield headquarters to adapt to the hybrid work model, though it would “stay in the general area” and remain accessible to Deerfield-based employees.