Company Culture

SevOne’s satellite office expands into new Center City space

The new 6,500 square foot space in Center City's Land Title Building at Broad and Chestnut Street can fit up to 55 employees. SevOne currently employs 30 in its Philly office.

One year after it opened its satellite office in Old City, Wilmington, Del.-based IT management company SevOne has moved its Philly-based development team into a bigger space to accommodate growth, according to a release.

SevOne initially opened a satellite development team in Philly as a pilot to see if the city location would help the company attract talent, a spokesman for the company said. It worked.

The new 6,500 square foot space in Center City’s Land Title Building at Broad and Chestnut Street can fit up to 55 employees. SevOne currently employs 30 in its Philly office, which makes up about 11 percent of its 270 total employees. It also has another other satellite development office in Boston.

It’s the first news we’ve seen of a satellite office outgrowing its original space — might the same happen for satellite offices of suburban tech companies like Bentley Systems and the newly-acquired Fiberlink?

As he has for several tech companies in the past year, Mayor Nutter will cut the ribbon on the new office later today. Find some photos below.

sevone 2

sevone

Companies: SevOne

Before you go...

Please consider supporting Technical.ly to keep our independent journalism strong. Unlike most business-focused media outlets, we don’t have a paywall. Instead, we count on your personal and organizational support.

Our services Preferred partners The journalism fund
Engagement

Join our growing Slack community

Join 5,000 tech professionals and entrepreneurs in our community Slack today!

Trending

A sneak peek inside Penn Engineering’s new $137.5M mass timber building 

Silicon Valley venture firm launches ‘Rising America’ fund to back diverse founders

Philly’s RealLIST startups are split on the remote versus hybrid work debate

Why are there so few tech apprenticeships?

Technically Media