Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Expedia Building

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Type
  
office

Roof
  
272 ft (83 m)

Height
  
83 m

Floors
  
20

Architecture firm
  
LMN Architects

Completed
  
2008

Floor count
  
20

Opened
  
2008

Cost
  
100 million USD

Construction started
  
2000

Expedia Building httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Alternative names
  
Tower 333, Technology Tower

Location
  
333 108 Ave NE Bellevue, Washington, USA

Similar
  
City Center Bellevue, Paccar Tower, Puget Power Building, 400 Building, The Commons at Federa

Expedia building connections find yours


The Expedia Building is a 20-story office building in the central business district of Bellevue, Washington. The building houses the corporate office of Expedia, Inc., which moved there at the end of 2008.

Contents

Map of Expedia Building, 333 108th Ave NE, Bellevue, WA 98004, USA

History

In October 1997, local developer Eugene Horbach proposed the design of the Bellevue Technology Tower as a 19-story building with 350,000 sq ft (33,000 m2) of space. The project was one of several in Bellevue accompanying the dot-com boom of the late 1990s.

Ambitious plans and the collapse of the dot-com bubble led to severe financial difficulties and delays. In June 2002, Horbach's development partnership defaulted on $22 million in loans. Union pension funds that financed the tower took over ownership of the site. To save the property from foreclosure in September 2002, Horbach sold a 10-acre (4 ha) development site he had spent 17 years acquiring. Then Horbach died on January 1, 2004.

With the excavation and part of the underground parking garage already complete, the Seattle office of real estate company Hines and Washington Capital Management announced revised plans for the site in March 2006. The city discussed the possibility of mandating construction projects to be completed once commenced due to the delays.

In August 2006, it was rumored that Google would be leasing most of the building's office space. The building was scheduled for completion in October 2007, but was delayed when a fixed tower crane at the site collapsed in November 2006, killing one person in a neighboring apartment building. In June 2007, Expedia announced that it would lease 16 floors of the building.

The Expedia Building received Gold-level certification for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Core & Shell from the U.S. Green Building Council. It was the first newly constructed office building in the city of Bellevue to achieve LEED Gold certification. The building is designed by LMN Architects of Seattle.

References

Expedia Building Wikipedia


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