Bank of America Plaza is a skyscraper located between Midtown Atlanta and Downtown Atlanta. At 311.8 m (1,023 ft), the tower is the 107th tallest building in the world. It is the 15th tallest building in the US, the tallest building in Georgia and the tallest building in every US state capital, overtaking 250 meters (820 ft), 50 floors at the height of One Atlantic Center, which previously holds the record for being the highest in Georgia. building. It has 55 floors of office space and was completed in 1992, when it was called NationsBank Plaza. Originally intended to be the headquarters for Citizens & amp; The Southern National Bank (which joined the Sovran Bank during construction), belonged to NationsBank after its formation in an unlicensed takeover in 1991 from C & S/Sovran by NCNB.
Video Bank of America Plaza (Atlanta)
Detail arsitektur
The building was developed by Cousins ââProperties and designed by architectural firm Kevin Roche John Dinkeloo and Associates LLC. Designed in Art DÃÆ' à © co style, built in just 14 months, one of the fastest construction schedules for any 1,000 feet (300 m) building. The presence of a stunning Plaza is reinforced by the dark color of its exterior. It towers into the sky with vertical lines that amplify its height while also creating many angular offices generating revenue. Located above 3.7 hectares (1.5 acres) on Peachtree Street.
There is a 90ft (27m) tall obelisk at the top of the building echoing the overall shape of the building. Most of the top of the tower is covered by 23 carat (96 percent) gold leaf. The open-grid steel pyramid under the obelisk shines yellow-orange at night due to the lighting. Initially, the lattice was designed to be coated glass, but the engineers failed to take into account the weight of the glass. Basically, this is a modern interpretation of the Art Deco theme seen in the Empire State Building and Chrysler Building. The inhabited part of the building actually ended suddenly with a flat roof. On top of this built pyramid beams, gilded and flame fires at night, with the kind of yellow-orange high-pressure lamp (HPS) that is now used in most street lamps. The design has been characterized similarly to Messeturm in Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
The skyscraper, built at a 45-degree angle to the city road, is set back from the borders of the eastern and western roads, Peachtree Street and West Peachtree Street, with more than 50 meters (45 m). This setback is filled, in various ways, by entrance, parking garage doors, potted plants, granite staircases, and sloping pages. The building is directly adjacent to the sidewalk on North Avenue, north border, with access to this road through the entrance of the parking garage and the stairs leading from the main lobby of the building.
Some city planners condemned the building as Corbusian "tower in the park", for actively breaking away from the surrounding urban environment, completely ignoring the retail space facing the sidewalk. Critics argue that the building encourages tenants to access it mainly by car and stay inside the complex during the day. But across the street from the MARTA-rail station North Avenue.
In recent years, developers have reported that the land beneath the entrance and the surrounding lawns will soon ripen to be rebuilt into low and medium mixed use buildings with front road use when the area is urbanized and the value of land in Midtown Atlanta increased. In 2014, new pavements, pavers, ADA ramps, pedestrian mast lamps, repaired tree wells, new bike racks and landscaping are in the planning stages. The environmental improvements are scheduled to be completed by 2016 at a cost of $ 1.04 million.
Maps Bank of America Plaza (Atlanta)
Renovations and sustainable development initiatives
In 2014, a $ 30 million renovation to the lobby, health club and conference facilities has been completed. It has also earned Leadership Certification in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Silver. Building and property management was awarded the Atlanta Metro Chamber of Commerce E3 Liquid Asset, an acknowledgment in water conservation. Midtown Alliance Midtown Atlanta also recognizes it as Green Greenlight EcoDistrict for a significant commitment to sustainability practices.
Starting in 2016, $ 15 million will be invested over the next few years to significantly modernize public areas including lobbying, western wings and some pending maintenance.
Building ownership
According to a report published in Commercial Property News and Commercial Mortgage Alert, the building sold for $ 436 million - a record price of $ 348 per square foot ($ 3746 per square meter) - for BentleyForbes, a Los Angeles real estate investment firm headed by C. Frederick Wehba. That was offset by a tower seizure in 2012 when LNR and lender took a loan back from BentleyForbes for $ 235 million, half the peak price.
In 2013, CWCapital Asset Management, the CW Financial Services division, took over asset management, sponsored and represented holders of building bonds from LNR. Together with real estate services company Cushman & amp; Wakefield and property manager Onyx Equities, they plan to build on a capital increase - a multi-million comeback expected to reach $ 30 million by 2018.
In 2016, San Francisco-based Shorenstein Properties acquired Bank of America Plaza under Shorenstein Realty Investors Eleven LP, a $ 1.2 billion fund. CBRE is employed to head leasing businesses. Shorenstein plans to change the image of the building by modernizing the public areas and renting out empty spaces.
By 2016, the biggest tenant is Troutman Sanders law firm.
In popular culture
The building emerged as the headquarters of Westgroup Energy in the drama of the AMC period Halt and Catch Fire .
Gallery
See also
- List of tallest buildings in the United States
- List of tallest buildings by the US state
- List of tallest buildings in Atlanta âââ ⬠<â â¬
- Downtown Atlanta âââ â¬
- Midtown Atlanta âââ â¬
References
External links
- Official building website
- Bank of America Plaza at CTBUH Skyscraper Center
- List of empires
- SkyscraperPage List
Source of the article : Wikipedia