The District Court and Court of Appeal in Gdansk are moving the Departments of Labor and Social Insurance and the Department of Intellectual Property to new headquarters in Globalworth’s Tryton building, where they will occupy approximately 2,800 square meters of rentable space.
The move is planned for spring of this year.
“We feel honored by the fact that public trust institutions – the Gdansk District Court and the Court of Appeal – decided to rent space in the Tryton building, showing confidence in our standards of cooperation, services provided, and the space offered,” said Agnieszka Gluchowska, Asset Management & Leasing Manager Globalworth in Poland. “We systematically make efforts to ensure that our offer meets the requirements and gains recognition of institutions and offices. Having already a diverse portfolio of tenants representing the public sector, we have developed an open, flexible approach to lease conditions, in order to meet expectations that are sometimes not obvious from the perspective of the commercial market.”
“The decision to move to a new building and change the model from ownership to rental of space is the result of our long-term plans,” commented Judge Lukasz Ziola, press spokesman of the District Court in Gdansk. “We aim to improve working conditions for judges and court administration employees and the efficient organization of the Court’s operation on the one hand, and on the other – to increase the comfort of staying on the court premises and handling official matters for interested parties. The priority was the possibility of allocating and adapting the space to our guidelines, conducive to the efficient operation of the Court, and the option of enlarging it if necessary.”
“We were looking for a space that would meet the standards of accessibility, safety, and usability,” added Judge Rafal Terlecki, press spokesman of the Court of Appeal in Gdansk. “The new headquarters in Tryton Business House contain such modern spaces, prepared according to our specifications by the Globalworth team. The location in one building together with the District Court streamlines the work of the administration of both instances and increases accessibility for interested parties.”
Tryton Business House offers 25,500 square meters of modern office space. In 2022, it underwent revitalization, and the main lobby is planned to be refreshed in the second quarter of 2025, which will further improve the aesthetic and functional reception of the building’s interiors.
The space on the second and third floors will be separated into offices and adapted to the needs of the District Court and Court of Appeals. The areas will be divided into public areas – courtrooms, administrative services, common areas and communication, and office facilities, social areas, and archives. The equipment will include solutions with improved technical parameters – especially room acoustics and security standards, as well as zone air conditioning and exclusively designated sanitary facilities.
The Tryton complex is is close to the Gdansk city center, making it a valuable, easily accessible location for public institutions, as well as a desirable, representative headquarters for companies in the private sector.The building is home to a canteen, a café, and a bicycle zone. Visitors and employees can use marked parking spaces and publicly available electric vehicle chargers.
“The Tryton complex tenants include renowned companies from the energy, banking, technology, and consulting industries,” said Mariusz Mos, Workplaces Project Manager at Globalworth in Poland. “We always strive to prepare spaces that are appropriate for the nature of the tenant’s industry, providing employees with comfort, efficiency, safety, freedom, and modernity. We always demonstrate our readiness to jointly develop individual solutions. It is worth emphasizing that by preparing fit-outs as an internal department of Globalworth, we can respond more effectively to specific requirements. This also applies to institutions such as courts, offices and other public entities. Cooperation on the project is exemplary; people responsible for implementation on the tenant’s side actively participate in creating project documentation and coordinating the smooth course of individual implementation stages.”
Aleksandra Staniszewska and Beata Lewandowska from JLL Poland provided support to the District Court and the Court of Appeal in the implementation of both transactions. “Modern, flexible office spaces, managed by the owner or an external operator, are becoming increasingly popular among public institutions,” noted Lewandowska. “We are observing a steady increase in interest in renting office space from the public services sector. Institutions are eager to replace their current offices in buildings usually adapted for work from their original residential function with professionally designed, appropriately equipped, secured and adapted to the needs of public sector organizations, with convenient access for clients and employees, a resource of parking spaces, facilities and the possibility of adding additional square footage if necessary. Thanks to its excellent location, high quality infrastructure and open negotiating attitude of the owner and manager of the building, Tryton is a good example of an office building that meets the needs of the public sector in terms of renting office space.”