Merck & Co., Inc. World Headquarters | |
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Aerial view
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General information | |
Type | Corporate headquarters |
Architectural style | Modernist |
Location | Whitehouse Station in Readington Township, New Jersey, United States |
Address | One Merck Drive |
Coordinates | 40°38′27″N 74°46′39″W / 40.640824°N 74.777627°WCoordinates: 40°38′27″N 74°46′39″W / 40.640824°N 74.777627°W |
Construction started | 1989 |
Completed | 1990 |
Inaugurated | 1992 |
Owner | Merck & Co. |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 3 |
Floor area | 1,600,000 sq ft (150,000 m2), i.e. 900,000 sq ft (84,000 m2) of office space, 700,000 sq ft (65,000 m2) underground parking |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates, LLC |
Civil engineer | Clarke & Rapuano |
Other designers | Edmund Hollander and Maryanne Connelly |
The former Merck & Co. headquarters building is a modernist office building located in the Whitehouse Station section of Readington Township, New Jersey, United States. It was designed by Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates, LLC in the late 1980s for the Merck & Co. pharmaceutical company. Over the years it became well known for its various environmentally friendly features.
On October 9, 2012, Merck & Co. announced that starting in 2014 it would move its headquarters to the Schering-Plough site (formerly belonging to Ciba, Ciba-Geigy and Novartis) in Summit, New Jersey, acquired in the Nov. 2009 acquisition of Schering, and planned to close the Whitehouse Station headquarters building upon completion of the move in 2015. In October, 2013 Merck & Co. reversed course and said its headquarters would move to Kenilworth, New Jersey and that the 88-acre Summit campus would be sold after being vacated on Dec. 31, 2014.
Constructed in 1990 as a home for the headquarters staff of Merck & Co., the building is most recognizable for its hexagon shape and its nature setting. The main building was constructed with a 600-foot (180 m) wide clearing at its center, filled with old-growth trees saved during the construction phase. Further, Merck & Co. placed the parking structure underground and created a temporary nursery on-site for the trees removed during construction, in order to make the facility a "corporate cottage in the woods". The building was originally set on 460 acres (190 ha) of property and has since been expanded to a 1,000-acre (4.0 km2) campus with auxiliary buildings. The initial site plan foresaw the subsequent addition of two buildings to create a grid of three connected hexagons, however, after a change in management, it was indicated that further construction in the original style would not occur. Instead a conventional office block was built adjacent to it known as "Whitehouse Station West".