While Stellantis is claiming they won't leave their Auburn Hills campus, I wouldn't put it pass them to move out of the state in the future.

Stellantis NV is reassessing its footprint in Michigan, including its mammoth North American base in Auburn Hills, amid contract talks with the United Auto Workers and a dayslong strike that threatens to intensify.
"As part of our company's evolution to a more flexible work environment, called the New Era of Agility, we are currently evaluating how we work to enable our teams to be their most innovative, creative and efficient," company spokeswoman Jodi Tinson told Crain's in an email. "That analysis includes potential adjustments to our real estate portfolio. However, the Chrysler Technology Center will continue to be our North American headquarters and North America technical center." The 5.4 million-square-foot Chrysler Technology Center east of I-75 and north of M-59 is among 18 facilities the automaker included in a proposal last Thursday to the UAW, according to a report from CNBC, which said the company is required to notify the UAW of any possible sales or closures of facilities where a union member works. Other Michigan plants potentially on the chopping block include the Trenton Engine Complex and Mount Elliott Tool & Die in Detroit, the report said.Like many office buildings around town — including General Motors' Renaissance Center in downtown Detroit — the hulking complex in Auburn Hills has sat underutilized since the COVID-19 pandemic ushered in the work-from-home era for many companies. Stellantis has maintained a flexible hybrid work approach even as some other companies have asked employees to return to the office full or part time.



Stellantis COO Mark Stewart, who is overseeing talks with the UAW, told WWJ-AM on Tuesday that the company has a "series of facilities that we were looking to downsize or reconfigure."

"Here in Auburn Hills, this is our North American headquarters. It will be our North American headquarters," Stewart told the radio station. "But like everyone in a hybrid working environment and looking at our overall environment across the region and specifically in the U.S., we have a lot of the building here in Auburn hills that we are not utilizing today. We're looking at other use cases for that."
Stellantis evaluating use of Auburn Hills headquarters | Crain's Detroit Business [[crainsdetroit.com)