National Building Museum
museum · Architect · design · Engineering office
National Building Museum 401 F Street Nw, 20001 WashingtonRuesch was founded in 1980 to provide corporate clients with an alternative to using banks when companies needed to make international payments or trade in foreign currencies. In order to serve the growing need for corporate foreign exchange services in the late 80's and early 90's, Ruesch introduced international payment services that were not tied to bank credit lines, forward contracts with lower minimum contract sizes and lower deposit requirements, as well as new channels to deliver customized international payment and foreign exchange trading services to meet the individual needs of its corporate clients. Among its many industry-leading innovations, Ruesch was one of the first international payment providers to offer a robust web-based account management system that allows clients to manage all aspects of their international payments in a secure online environment. With its pioneering approach to international payment solutions, Ruesch is committed to helping clients keep a step ahead and compete in global markets. In 2005, Ruesch International merged with Trancentrix, a leading provider of bank-independent solutions for streamlining and reducing costs associated with the corporate payments process. The technology, expertise, and resources of the combined company positioned Ruesch to provide a unique, integrated range of bank-independent domestic and international payment processing and global risk management solutions. Together, the two companies deliver a broad range of business-to-business payment solutions which include check to ACH conversion services, payment system consolidation solutions, and global risk management. Ruesch expects to significantly increase market share in the domestic and international payment processing area, particularly in the Fortune 1000 segment.
700 Eleventh Street NW Fourth Floor, 20001 Eden Prairie
museum · Architect · design · Engineering office
National Building Museum 401 F Street Nw, 20001 Washington