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Brokers and documents say that Expand Energy is exploring the sale of the entire iconic Oklahoma campus.

Brokers and documents say that Expand Energy is exploring the sale of the entire iconic Oklahoma campus.

Expand Energy, formerly known under the name Chesapeake and the largest U.S. Natural Gas producer, wants to sell most of the campus in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. This is according to the document that was reviewed by the brokers who were involved with the sale.

The sale of real estate is another step towards the diminution of the iconic Chesapeake, which was once synonymous with U.S. Shale Revolution.

The company has hired Colliers International Group's Commercial Oklahoma Division and Cushman & Wakefield’s Commercial Oklahoma division as real estate brokers to market the over 100 acres (40.5 hectares), of campus located in the northern suburbs Oklahoma City.

Travis Mason, Director at Cushman & Wakefield Commercial Oklahoma, stated that Expand intends to keep its 253,000 square-foot (23.505 sq-meter) headquarters, also known as Building 15. The company will also retain four garden-style structures, a parking lot, and two acres of property.

Mason said that the sale considerations for the remainder of the real estate are in an early stage. This includes a 56.250-square-foot-data center with 2.9 megawatts critical power generation capacity.

Walker Ryan, principal at Colliers, says that real estate developers are likely to be interested in the sale, but other companies seeking to purchase individual buildings may also be involved.

Mason and Ryan declined to provide an appraisal for the real property and said that it would depend whether the properties were sold in one transaction or separately.

Expand has not responded to comments immediately.

In a $7 billion merger last year, the company changed its name to Southwestern Energy, a rival, and will be bankrupt in 2020. It became the biggest U.S. producer of natural gas after its merger, but it has seen its workforce drop dramatically in recent years due to a number of layoffs.

Aubrey McClendon, the late founder of Chesapeake, meticulously planned the campus as the company grew from 10 employees in 1989 when he founded it to more than 12,000 employees in 2012.

McClendon who died in an auto accident in 2016 spared no expense in building the campus. It includes a 67,000 square-foot fitness centre with a swimming pool of Olympic size, four restaurants, and a daycare facility measuring 62,000 square-feet.

The Oklahoman reported that at its peak in the early 2000s, more than 8,000 Chesapeake workers worked on the campus. The newspaper reported that as of last year this number had dropped to 560.

According to the company's annual reports, Chesapeake will have about 1,000 employees at the end of 2023. Shariq Khan, New York, and Liz Hampton & Marguerita Choy edited the article.

(source: Reuters)