 The story of the Sisters and this project really spans 150 years. The Sisters came to the area in the early 1870s, and their order was established in 1874. Over the past 150 years, the Order of St. Francis Medical Center has grown from, I believe, a 13-bed hospital to one of the largest healthcare organizations in the region. When it came time for the Order of St. Francis healthcare to find a new headquarters, it was a really wonderful coming together. The Sisters were well positioned to be able to work with Caterpillar Tractor, their own organization, and the city of Peoria to acquire this parcel in the downtown of Peoria. It was a moment where they could really invest in the downtown and say, we believe in Peoria, we believe that this building and the site can really make a difference in the people of Peoria's lives. This building for 700 employees does not have in-house cafeteria, so that means that every day 700 people are arriving at the building looking for their morning cup of coffee, so bringing that many people to downtown really meant this is 700 employees, but it's also 700 shoppers. We embraced innovative as well as more traditional approaches to this building. To eliminate some of the unknowns of the proper project like this, we did employ drones, we did do a lot of investigative openings in the building. The engineers at Thornton Tomassetti were very diligent, found the original drawings for the original 1918 building and 1905 buildings. The building was built at the very early stages of electrification, so the building relied on natural light, huge windows, and operable sash. Over time and through the mid-century, the building was reused several times. It became a Carson Perry Scott in the 1960s. It was renovated according to the tendons of a new modern sensibility, which meant closing off the exterior and making the shopping experience more inward-looking. When we came upon the building, we had to look at those challenges and say, this is going to be a modern workspace. We need to have those open floor plates once again. Our challenge is really to look at the exterior and bring it up to modern code, keep it looking historic as possible, but also allow for natural light to continue. When a city looks at the potential of their downtown, they really have to commit to the longest term, highest ideal, which is the revitalization of the downtown, that's possible because of the reuse of the building like this. It absolutely gives me chills to think about what the sisters from 150 years ago would think about this project, to think that they had an idea to serve Peoria, that they had a small hospital, and now it has grown to this, and now the headquarters are seven small blocks away from where their original hospital stood.