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Friday, April 8, 2011 9:27 PM
Journal/Sam Green
A collage of old pictures in the shape of First National Bank’s logo hangs on the history wall of the new bank Wednesday.
Journal/Sam Green
FirstNationalBank President Byron Maynes demonstrates the new relationship banker system with the help of bank Vice President of Operations Marsha Chaffin on Wednesday.
Journal/Sam Green
The new First National Bank will open Monday at 2258 E. Main St., Cortez.
Journal/Sam Green
First National Bank Vice President of Commercial Loans Jim Muller demonstrates the smart board in the boardroom of the new bank Wednesday.
Journal/Sam Green
Byron Maynes, president of First National Bank, shows the track system for the drive-through window at the bank’s new building on East Main Street on Wednesday. The track system, which will be used instead of the vacuum-tube system employed at the bank’s old building, allows for larger and heavier deposits.

First National Bank President Byron Maynes can travel through time.

OK — not exactly. But Maynes can stand beside historic Montezuma County photographs integrated into First National’s wall-mounted logo, and then walk through the bank’s new state-of-the art building.

First National Bank’s building at 2258 E. Main St., Cortez, will open at 8:30 a.m. Monday, April 11. The $4 million, 10,082-square-foot facility goes beyond basic banking to offer amenities ranging from a 58-seat community room to a wireless Internet cafe.

“We want this to be the premier building in Cortez,” Maynes said Wednesday during a tour of the facility.

First National Bank officials planned the new facility for three years, Maynes said. The local bankers went on tour to learn about bank designs. The tour included banks as near as Durango and Montrose, and as far as Nashville, Tenn., St. Louis and Cincinnati.

“We looked at 22 banks in nine states,” Maynes said.

First National Bank welcomes visitors into a building that feels like a Colorado bank. Rock columns provide an earthy touch to the interior. A mural of Trout Lake near Telluride stretches about 30 feet wide by 14 feet tall along one wall. Photographed by Montezuma County resident Bill Proud, the giant mural can make visitors feel like they’re standing in the majestic San Juan Mountains.

Customers entering the facility will be greeted by a receptionist, but don’t call that person a receptionist. The bank’s new building includes a new approach to customer service, and the “first impression” person will help direct customers to other bank employees.

Many of those customers will visit a dialogue station.

“Instead of the traditional teller line, there’s a lot of places that we visited that use this technique,” Maynes said. “It’s a lot more personal.”

Switching the job title from teller to “relationship banker,” First National has turned the traditional teller booth, with a counter that separates customers from tellers, into a work station where a customer can stand beside a relationship banker, said First National Bank Vice President of Operations Marsha Chaffin. That gives customers the ability to look at their account information on the same computer screen the relationship banker is using instead of looking at the back of a computer.

The bank also implemented cross training so its 23 employees can switch from one job duty to another in order to serve customers and keep them from waiting too long, Maynes said.

One of First National’s many technical upgrades is a machine that replaces the traditional cash drawer that tellers use, Maynes said. A teller — relationship banker — can feed money into the machine. If a customer wants to cash a check, the relationship banker can enter the check and the machine will discharge the appropriate amount of cash.

“The tellers no longer have this drawer they have to keep track of,” Maynes said. “The machine, the technology, keeps track.”

In the center of its lobby, First National Bank has a “little Internet cafe” with wireless service, Maynes said. The wireless service is not the same wireless system that bank employees use.

The First National Bank building has a lofty ceiling in its lobby area, and 13 offices with glass walls surround the central lobby area.

“We wanted the bank to look very open, but we also wanted privacy in the offices,” Maynes said.

An electronic “smart board” in the bank’s boardroom is another high-tech touch at First National Bank. The smart board looks like a large-screen TV mounted on the wall but serves as a computer screen that can display information such as economic charts.

On the bank’s east side, the community room provides audio-visual equipment that includes a 10-foot video screen.

“The technology in this room is really going to be great,” said Vice President of Commercial Loans Jim Muller.

The community room will be available during and after bank hours, Maynes said. A separate exterior door provides access to the room. The bank will provide a swipe card, similar to the cards that hotels use, for people to access the room after hours.

Outside, First National Bank’s new building has a four-lane drive-through, Maynes said. Three lanes have a traditional teller, and the lane closest to the building has an automated teller machine and night deposit.

The Cincinnati-based design/build firm DEI designed the First National Bank building, according to bank officials.

DEI specializes in facilities for banks and credit unions, according to the firm’s website.

A combination of local and outside contractors built the First National Bank facility, according to bank officials.

First National Bank was founded in 1958. The old building at 140 W. Main St., Cortez, is under contract to sell to Montezuma County for $400,000.



Reach Russell Smyth at russells@cortezjournal.com.

First National Bank builds green facility

First National Bank’s new building on East Main Street might be as green as the cash that customers deposit.
The bank uses green building techniques in its new facility, said Mark Autrey, First National’s vice president of information systems.
One example is the nLight system, Autrey said. When exterior sunlight fills the building, interior lights automatically turn off. When it’s darker outside, interior lights turn on.
Energy-efficient light bulbs and passive solar also help lower the building’s energy consumption, Autrey said. Windows are designed to let heat in during winter when the sun is lower in the sky and light strikes the window from a lower angle, and to bounce heat off during summer when the sunlight strikes from a higher angle.
Desks, carpets and fabrics, even metal studs and roofing material, use some recycled material, Autrey said.
“We wanted to do as many green things as we could,” he said.

First National Bank events

First National Bank will open at its new location at 2258 E. Main St., Cortez, at 8:30 a.m. Monday, April 11.
A grand opening celebration with an open house and refreshments will be held from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday, April 15, and from 9 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 16.
A Cortez Area Chamber of Commerce Business After Hours gathering will be held from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday, April 14.
Normal bank hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday. Drive-through-window hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 9 a.m. to noon Saturday.
For more information, call the bank at 565-3781.

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