
One of Dublin's most familiar construction names is getting ready to pack up its hard hats. Ruscilli Construction Co. has listed its longtime headquarters on Wall Street for roughly $5 million as the family-owned builder scopes out a new home base. The single-story campus has served as the company’s local command center for years, but Ruscilli has not yet disclosed where - or exactly when - it might move.
The property is a 22,514-square-foot, single-tenant office building on about 4.27 acres. It is being marketed at $5,065,000 and is described with modern interior finishes, on-site parking and garage-style doors that open into an indoor-outdoor workspace, according to LoopNet. The listing, which went live late last month, is handled by Allied Real Estate Advisors and is being pitched to both owner-users and investors. Parcel and assessment data on the listing tie the building directly to Ruscilli’s Wall Street address in Dublin.
Company exploring relocation
Ruscilli has started formally exploring a headquarters relocation and put the Dublin site on the market as part of that process, according to Columbus Business First. The outlet cites public marketing and county property records confirming that the asset is for sale. For now, the company is weighing its options rather than committing to a specific new address or timeline.
Ruscilli's central-Ohio footprint
Founded in 1945, Ruscilli highlights a long list of civic, healthcare and commercial projects across central Ohio and still lists its corporate contact as 5815 Wall Street in Dublin, according to Ruscilli Construction. The firm has been a constant presence on both public and private job sites for decades and is regularly shortlisted for major local builds. A headquarters move would not change the company’s portfolio overnight, but it would shift where its administrative staff and client meetings are based in the region.
What’s next for the property
The LoopNet listing frames the offering as ideal for an owner-user and includes price-per-square-foot figures and current tax assessments, a sign that Ruscilli is positioning the site for a sale rather than a short-term lease. Likely suitors range from other construction outfits that want a recognizable address to local companies hunting for a campus-style headquarters or investors looking for a stable office asset.
For now, the listing puts a well-known Dublin address in play and raises open questions about any ripple effects a sale could have on local construction employment or vendor relationships. We will be watching county filings, brokerage updates and any statements from Ruscilli for clues on where the company lands next - and how quickly the Wall Street property changes hands.









