Neha Patil (Editor)

Bank of America Center (Houston)

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Type
  
Commercial office

Height
  
238 m

Opened
  
October 1983

Management
  
PM Realty Group

Floors
  
56

Lifts/elevators
  
32

Bank of America Center (Houston) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Alternative names
  
RepublicBank Center NCNB Center NationsBank Center

Location
  
700 Louisiana Street Houston, Texas

Completed
  
October 1983; 33 years ago (October 1983)

Owner
  
M-M Properties General Electric Pension Trust affiliate

Architects
  
Philip Johnson, John Burgee

Similar
  
Wells Fargo Plaza, Heritage Plaza, Williams Tower, JPMorgan Chase Building, One Shell Plaza

The Bank of America Center is a highrise representing one of the first significant examples of postmodern architecture construction in downtown Houston, Texas. Formerly known as the RepublicBank Center, the NCNB Center, and the NationsBank Center, the building was completed in October 1983 and designed by award winning architect Philip Johnson and partner John Burgee, and is reminiscent of the Dutch Gothic architecture of canal houses in The Netherlands. It has three segmented tower setbacks, each with "a steeply pitched gabled roofline that is topped off with spires". The tower was developed by Hines Interests and is owned by a joint venture of M-M Properties and an affiliate of the General Electric Pension Trust.

Contents

Map of Bank of America Center, 700 Louisiana St, Houston, TX 77002, USA

The banking center is housed in a separate building, due to construction problems, and has a three storey lobby. There are 32 passenger elevators each finished with wood panels that include Birdseye Maple, Macassar Ebony, Italian Willow, Tamo, and Kevazingo. The building contains an art gallery in the lobby and plans to host curated exhibitions.

Background

At 56 stories the Bank of America Center is the 55th tallest building in the United States and is the seventh tallest building in Texas.

The northeast corner of the structure houses a building within a building. On the site is the main Western Union building and when relocation of the telegraph cables proved infeasible new structure was built over the site and the existing structure was incorporated into the new building intact.

On June 9, 2001, the building was the site of a tragic accident that took place during Tropical Storm Allison. Building security warned individuals that the below grade parking levels were in danger of flooding and instructed persons working late in the building to move vehicles to upper levels of the garage. Kristie Tautenhahn, an employee of the law firm Mayer, Brown & Platt, went to move her vehicle parked on sub-level 3 at 10:30 UTC (05:30 CDT) which by that time was completely submerged. She drowned in an elevator car when it filled with water as it descended to the lower floor of the garage.

Tenants

  • Mayer Brown has its Houston office in Suite 3400.
  • Vorys, Sater, Seymour and Pease LLP has its Houston office in Suite 4100
  • References

    Bank of America Center (Houston) Wikipedia